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Spinal Fusion Back Surgery Chiropractic Before and After

What are good odds? 1 in 50? 50 in 100? The odds of spine surgery patients developing failed back surgical syndrome are 4 to 50%, 4 to 50 in 100. (1) Are those good odds? McMurray Chiropractic Solutions offers San Jose chiropractic care, non-surgical care, with odds at least equal to those odds for our San Jose back pain patients seeking relief of pain.

First, back surgery and its ramifications for back pain relief. One article discusses when back surgery is the right choice. Sometimes, it is necessary, but the author invites a surgical candidate to know what it does to the spine. This article counsels that “the decision to consider back surgery should always come after trying non-surgical or ‘conservative’ options. However, when ‘the pain is persistent and clearly related to a mechanical problem in the spine,’” it may make sense. (1)  Today, spinal fusion surgeries are growing in use.

What happens in a spinal fusion? The intent is to fuse an unstable joint to prevent motion and thus pain. Two spinal bones – vertebrae – next to each other are joined surgically to become one unit. Metal screws and rods may be used to do this. Fusion surgeries are major surgeries, and they don’t always succeed. One Harvard Medical School professor, Dr. Steven Atlas, explains that “Based on the evidence, the indications for fusion are few and far between, but that doesn't stop surgeons from doing them or patients from getting them." He even shares that pain is typically reduced by 50%, and very few fusion surgery patients have no pain after the surgery. (2) So the odds of surgical success with fusion are 50%. What about the odds of chiropractic success for back pain?

Equal if not better. Chiropractic care with a technique called Cox Technic flexion distraction spinal manipulation and decompression offers promise. (Listen in to this discussion about failed back surgical syndrome care with Cox Technic.) Before surgery, Cox Technic odds of pain relief are up to 91% for low back conditions like disc degeneration, herniation, spondylolisthesis, sprain/strain, etc. After back surgery and the post-surgical continued pain experience some back pain sufferers have, greater than 50% pain relief. The study showed specifically that 81% of postsurgical patients receiving a mean of 11 visits over a 49-day period of active care found relief. 50% relief is good. (3)

We all seek the best odds possible when making a decision, especially a decision as big as surgery. Back surgery offers stunning odds: 4 to 50% that a back pain patient who undergoes back surgery will experience failed back surgical syndrome. What comes with failed back surgical syndrome? Pain, obviously, but also repeat surgeries, higher costs, decreases in surgical success rates, and other physical, physiological and pathological issues come, too. (1) With odds like this, McMurray Chiropractic Solutions invites San Jose back pain sufferers to consider chiropractic care.

Certainly, McMurray Chiropractic Solutions would hope to be a pre-surgical stop that relieves and controls San Jose back pain and potentially staves off a lumbar spine surgery, but also offers San Jose chiropractic services to reduce post-surgical continued pain when it occurs.

McMurray Chiropractic Solutions is equipped and ready to help San Jose back pain patients who are contemplating back surgery as well as those who have undergone back surgery and have continued pain. Either way, Chiropractic Solutions knows that San Jose back pain sufferers are seeking relief and may well be quite accepting of the 50% odds of relief as a desirable outcome.

Contact McMurray Chiropractic Solutions today for a pre-back surgery or a post-back surgery consultation to see how San Jose chiropractic care may benefit you.

 
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"This information and website content is not intended to diagnose, guarantee results, or recommend specific treatment or activity. It is designed to educate and inform only. Please consult your physician for a thorough examination leading to a diagnosis and well-planned treatment strategy. See more details on the DISCLAIMER page. Content is reviewed by Dr. James M. Cox I."