PROLOTHERAPY IS A NON-SURGICAL OPTION FOR SPORTS INJURY! With Prolotherapy, you can
keep training, get back in the game/event quickly, no down time, no long rehab required, alternative to the much-feared often career-ending surgeries...
Prolotherapy
has many advantages over surgery, including less rehabilitation time, cost,
and the fact that it gets at the root cause of the athlete's problem, which
is tendon or ligament weakness.
Flaws with Rotator Cuff Surgery
A study done at the Mayo Clinic in 1997
by Dr. Mansat and colleagues reported a complication rate of 38 percent
in shoulders undergoing rotator cuff repair. In order of frequency, the
complications of the surgery were frozen shoulder, deep infection, and
dislocation. Many of these patients who developed frozen shoulder had undergone
a second surgical procedure to remove the adhesions.
Rotator Cuff Tendinitis
and Impingement
Syndrome Rotator cuff tendinitis occurs when the small muscles
of the rotator cuff become strained causing weakness of these structures
and subsequent tendinitis. Pitchers, quarterbacks, tennis players (serving),
and swimmers are prone to rotator cuff tendinitis and impingement syndrome
because they perform a lot of overhead movements which is when the rotator
cuff is in its most vulnerable in this position.
Impingement syndrome occurs
when the rotator cuff tendon becomes pinched between the humeral head and
the overhanging acromion process when the arm is raised above the head.
This happens when the space becomes narrowed, as occurs when the rotator
cuff muscles weaken and the humeral head rides high in the socket or when
bone spurs and calcium deposits narrow the space. Impingement also occurs
when the contents of the subacromial space increase in size, most often
due to a swollen rotator cuff tendon or bursa, which is painfully squeezed
between the humeral head and the acromion process.
Common treatment for
rotator cuff tendinitis and impingement syndrome by traditional medical
doctors includes rest, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs),
physical therapy, and cortisone injections into
the subacromial space. Because a cortisone injection has very strong anti-inflammatory
properties, it may reduce the swelling in the tendon and bursa, relieving
the symptoms. These treatments may temporarily help, but since the underlying
cause has not been addressed the problem invariably returns. Degenerative
fraying and tearing of the tendon may occur if constant irritation of the
tendon occurs from the impingement process over time. The best way to treat
this unresolved process is with Prolotherapy injections to the ligaments and
tendinous insertions of the rotator cuff and deltoid. This, combined with
gradual re-strengthening of the rotator cuff muscles, give an excellent
chance for a full recovery and performance.
Prolotherapy to the Shoulder
Ross Hauser, MD demonstrates a typical Prolotherapy
procedure to a shoulder, as done at Caring Medical and Rehabilitation
Services in Oak Park, Illinois. Dr. Hauser treats patients
from around the globe with Hackett-Hemwall Prolotherapy and
has found it is an excellent alternative to shoulder surgery
for pain, rotator cuff tears and labral tears, in addition
to offering permanent solution for chronic pain typically
not seen with traditional anti-inflammatory treatment, such
as NSAIDs and cortisone injections. If you would like to
see our other videos on Prolotherapy, or would like to email
Dr. Hauser to see if Prolotherapy can help your shoulder
pain, please visit www.caringmedical.com.
Prolotherapy can be successful in treating almost all chronic
shoulder pain conditions and injuries, including: sports
injuries, osteoarthritis, shoulder joint degeneration, frozen
shoulder, tendon injury, ligament injury, rotator cuff injury,
and labral tear injury.
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The
information on this website is presented as information only and not a
self-help guide. Never alter or change your health management or begin
any new health plans without first consulting your personal health care
provider. Some statements on this site regarding the value of nutritional
supplements have not been evaluated by the FDA.
Prolotherapy may not be effective for every individual and there are risks involved,
these risks should be discussed with your physician. Results achieved
with some may not be typical of all. Please consult a physician.
There
is no known cure for arthritis. Prolotherapy and nutritional supplements
can help alleviate, reverse, or end arthritic pain by treating an underlying
cause that contributes to degenerative disease, ligament laxity. Strengthening
ligaments and other connective tissue can help prevent bone on bone arthritis
from developing.