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Re: [Piriformis syndrome] Newly diagnosed   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #1315 of 2540 |
Thanks Mary! I need to get on finding a PT. I am having a huge battle with my
ortho right now. It seems as if he just doesn't want to give me pain meds or
muscle relaxers anymore. I wonder if I should find a Pain Management doctor.

Melissa

----- Original Message -----
From: Mary Smith
To: piriformissyndrome@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, April 28, 2006 1:33 AM
Subject: [Piriformis syndrome] Newly diagnosed


Hi Melissa. Piriformis syndrome is problematic. In my
opinion, the recovery rate varies tremendously. Here
are my observations based on being in the group a few
years. (I am not a doctor or PT, by the way). There
seems be to 3 or 4 distinct groups of people:
1- Runners, athletics, etc which develop this from
overuse.
2- People who fall on their butt
3-People who developed this from way too much sitting
or have an unknown cause of the problem.
4-People who have had some kind of back surgery,
usually an L5 S1 fusion.

Runners seem to have the highest recovery rate. Good
PT from a therapist specializing in Sports Medicine
often works well.

For the other groups, it is a much longer road.
Generally, the longer you have had the problem, the
harder it is to resolve. A year & a half probably
seems like a long time to you, but many people here
went years & years w/o accurate diagnosis.

The people with L5 S1 fusions have terrible problems
because their pelvis is locked in an abnormal position
causing muscles to to compensate thus causing more
pain & problems elsewhere.

I'm a big believer in good PT, but it is hard to find
PTs with advanced manual skills & training. You
really need someone who understands the bio-mechanics
of the pelvis because the Piriformis Syndrone might be
caused by another problem(s) in pelvic muscle
imbalance.

About 70% of PTs only know enough to give ultrasound,
massage, e-stim, stretching & strengthening exercises.
With long standing cases, that is probably
insufficient treatment. The ultrasound, massage,
e-stim feel good, but really don't do anything other
than eat up your insurance benefits.

At a minimum, your PT should check the position of
your pelvis at the beginning of each session and have
many yrs experience using Myeo Fascial Release
therapy.

Hope you can find a good PT - don't just take the
first person you can get an appointment with. If
possible, get recommendations from PTs. Ask them who
has really good manual skills & success treating this
kind of thing.

Good luck, Mary

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Fri Apr 28, 2006 12:44 pm

melissaapowe...
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Forward
Message #1315 of 2540 |
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Thanks Mary! I need to get on finding a PT. I am having a huge battle with my ortho right now. It seems as if he just doesn't want to give me pain meds or...
Melissa A. Powell
melissaapowe...
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Apr 28, 2006
12:48 pm

Hi, It is better when the doctor does not do anything then doing the wrong thing! Pain killers don't help much unless you get lidocaine injections directly...
Nilgün EKENER
nilgunekener
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Apr 29, 2006
7:35 am

He stretched my leg in some funky position. This week on Wednesday I go in for a nerve study. ... From: james weber To: piriformissyndrome@yahoogroups.com ...
Melissa A. Powell
melissaapowe...
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May 1, 2006
1:45 pm
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