The current opioid epidemic has illustrated to medical practitioners across the country that medication and conventional treatments don’t offer the best solution for every patient. While surgery remains another traditional treatment option, it can have cost barriers to many patients, and may not fully address chronic pain. This is because medical research is proving more and more that chronic pain isn’t just a physical sensation: it’s an intricate state that draws from the emotional condition, mental perception, and even social influences.
As a result, more researchers are focusing on studies that examine how and why complementary therapies can be used as part of a treatment plan for chronic pain sufferers. Everything from meditation, yoga, hypnosis, acupuncture, and other ancient medical practices are being studied to more fully understand the relief they can bring. The future of pain management doesn’t just lie with physicians – it’s being shaped to include a network of psychologists, mental health providers, physicians, chiropractors, and other alternative health providers.
Acupuncture is a holistic procedure in the tradition of ancient Chinese medicine. During treatment, Dr. Doyle inserts very thin, sterilized stainless steel needles into strategic points on the body to increase circulation and stimulate the nerves, muscles, and tissues within the musculoskeletal system. This process of stimulating pressure points helps to eliminate chronic and acute pain for patients dealing with neck and back pain, arthritis, TMJ disorders, migraines, and more. Millions of Americans use acupuncture to address chronic pain, according to the National Institute of Health. Recently, an analysis of nearly 18,000 patients at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center found that acupuncture relieves back, neck, and shoulder pain, as well as chronic headaches and the pain associated with osteoarthritis.
While the analysis showed some evidence to point to acupuncture’s “placebo effect”, researchers concluded that placebo effects in both traditional and alternative medicine are a uniquely critical part of pain treatment, since pain processing occurs differently for everyone. Unlike so many other medical conditions, the psychological state of a patient comes into play significantly with pain management. Therefore, whatever treatments can address the psychological state, as well as the physical, can be most effective.
If you are suffering from chronic pain and are interested in how alternative therapy could offer supplemental pain relief from your body pain, headaches, or osteoarthritis pain, contact Doyle Chiropractic in Roanoke, TX. We’ve helped patients just like you discover how acupuncture, chiropractic care, and other complementary therapies can make daily life less painful. Call us at 817-767-5430 to schedule your appointment with Dr. Doyle.
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