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Why an MRI Is Not the Best Ligament Injury Imaging Test

Why an MRI Is Not the Best Ligament Injury Imaging Test

Why an MRI Is Not the Best Ligament Injury Imaging Test

In this article we want to discuss an article that was published in the American Family Physicians Journal. This article brings up a topic that I’ve been talking about for years. And it’s only gotten worse. This article claims that 90% of today’s injured patients who’ve suffered a back or neck injury are working with doctors who do not have a clear understanding of their injuries. Wait, it gets even worse.

There’s A Familiar Lack of Understanding Present in This Article

These same doctors are unable to find the underlying physical conditions of these injuries at a time when these back and neck injuries have never been easier to diagnose. We’ve gone over this before and I am not going to go into depth in this article abut the role that an MRI and stress radiological studies play in picking up the two key bio imaging markers for these injured patients. These injuries account for:
  • #1 Cause of disability and chronic pain: Lumbar Spine Injury
  • #4 Cause of disability and chronic pain: Neck Injuries
  • #6 Cause of disability and chronic pain: Headaches associated with an injury to the ligament of the cranio-cervical junction or the cervical spine itself
I want to go over this with you in detail. I’ll put a link to the article here which appears on the American Family Physician website. The article we’re going to break down is the one called “Non-Specific Low Back Pain in Returning to Work” You can open it up and follow along with me.

I’m going to point out some things that are very prevalent in the market today and this is exactly what needs to change.

It says that as many as 90% of persons with occupational non-specific low back pain are able to return to work in a relatively short period of time. Now, I’m going to contest this point and quite a few other things in this article. You see, this position paper is a telltale sign of today’s market and it’s pushing the agenda that if there are no red flags with a patient, we as doctors can get them back to work quickly.

What are these red flags, you ask?

  • Infections
  • Fractures
  • Cauda Equina Syndrome
If one of these isn’t present a patient should be encouraged to remain as active as possible. We should minimize bed rest. It states that we should advocate the use of hot and cold compresses to minimize swelling and tell patients to take anti-inflammatory medications as desired.

What this article is telling doctors to do…

These patients need to take part in home exercises and be returned to work as soon as possible. Medical and surgical interventions should be minimized when abnormalities are not found in physical examinations. Patients who are having difficulty returning to work after four to six weeks should be examined and studied for possible personal and occupational psychosocial factors. A multidisciplinary program should be strongly considered to prevent a delayed recovery in those patients struggling to return to normal baseline activities and pain levels. One of the biggest problems I see with delayed recovery is that it is often the result of a delay of an accurate diagnosis of what the problem is in the first place. This article rightly points out that these medical doctors openly admit that they do not know what the underlying pathology is as you’ll see here. So, it goes on to say that patient advocacy should include unnecessary and ineffective medical and surgical interventions, work loss, joblessness, and chronic disabilities. The next thing the article states is that the management of low back pain and determining a patient’s safe return to work are common issues encountered by family physicians today.

Challenges include unfamiliarity with:

  • A patient’s individual job demands and requirements
  • Complex Workers’ Compensation systems
  • The vast array of diagnostic and therapeutic interventions of questionable effectiveness and value
The medical doctors in this article are actually openly admitting that most of the diagnostic and therapeutic interventions they order have questionable effectiveness and value when it comes to treating and diagnosing these injured patients.

Clearly, the object of this article is to encourage a plan of conservative care.

What is conservative care?
  • Physical Therapy
  • Chiropractic
  • Massage
  • Acupuncture
This is what most family doctors follow when they talk about following a conservative care path for their injured patients with occupational low back pain. This article throws around a lot of terms, so let’s take a moment and define one of them. Occupational nonspecific low back pain is pain that occurs predominantly in the lower back without neurological involvement or serious pathology. Let’s be real here, okay?

What they are basically promoting in this article is an early return to work for injured patients. And that right there is a huge part of the problem.

It says that according to the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics that there were 4.2 million non-fatal occupational injuries or illnesses reported by private industry. Sprains and strains accounted for approximately 42% of the injuries. So, as doctors they need to understand that when we look at the number of injuries, those involving the back is number one. It’s the number one cause of chronic pain and disability in the world today. And if you remember as I stated earlier the next is number four. That’s a huge number of our injured workers. So, sprains and to the back and neck are going to require doctors in the market who understand what a bio imaging marker looks like in an injured patient with neck or back complaints. Meaning, you will no longer have patients walking around with an incorrect diagnosis of nonspecific mechanical low back pain.

The Role of Risk Factors in Diagnosing These Injuries

This article goes on to attribute the cause of this nonspecific low back pain to certain risk factors. That’s because these doctors will openly tell you that they have no way of accurately diagnosing these patients. In general, medical doctors cannot clearly identify the cause of this pain in 90% of the patients they see. Now, when I say medical doctor, I’m talking about general practitioners. Now, it goes on to say that some physical demands including manual lifting, bending, twisting, and whole-body vibration are associated with an increased likelihood of low back pain. Please note: Association is not equivalent to causation. It should also be noted that personal and occupational psychosocial variables play a more important role in spinal pathology than just the physical demands of the job.

And that’s where it can get kind of tricky…

They openly admit they don’t know the cause of this low back pain, yet in a sentence or two later they are saying there’s strong evidence that personal or occupational psychosocial variables play a more important role in these injuries than the spinal pathology itself. Now, that my fellow doctors… Could not be further from the truth.

Let’s look at what they list as psychosocial risk factors:

  • Depression: Well I would argue that anybody who suffers from chronic pain and cannot get help from the medical community might exhibit signs of depression. Especially in an active person who cannot find relief or understanding from a doctor who understands their condition.
  • Education Level: This is an understanding and belief that those with lower education levels are more prone to chronic disabilities. Again, what does someone’s education level have to do with an injury. Isn’t more likely the case that a doctor who cannot solve a problem with an accurate diagnosis is likely to blame a patient’s lack of education as the basis for the patient himself not understanding their own injury?
  • Excessive Pain: Well, if you are in constant pain and the medical community is not offering relief, over time this can build up. Is there anyone who wouldn’t say that this amount of chronic pain would be classified as excessive?
  • Fear Avoidance: If you are suffering and unable to find anyone to help you, it’s fair to say that you would fear returning to the same position that caused you pain. That’s a totally legitimate concern. That’s not something I would classify as fear avoidance or job dissatisfaction.
  • Somatization disorder: That is when you are putting too much attention on a condition. Si, again if the doctor cannot figure out what the problem is, if they cannot get to the underlying problem that is going to cause you some obvious distress. It would be hard to imagine a condition like this not dominating your life. So, this talk of “putting too much attention” on this condition seems to be unfair from the patient’s point of view.
  • Unemployment Compensation: What does this have to do with a medical condition? If you’re unemployed and trying to get money to live on from an employer whose job caused your injury, I do not see how that causes pain. I would say it’s the same thing with workers’ compensation claims. It’s not fair to say that legitimately injured patients are trying to distort their injuries just to receive some compensation.
All these issues are problematic when you consider what is really going on.

There is no standardized method of diagnosing these injuries.

Even my own profession of chiropractic is problematic. They have not and are unlikely to standardize the workup of these injuries. The major chiropractic schools don’t even teach bio imaging markers that are consistent with soft-tissue injury to the spine. So then, this becomes the problem that all professions have: physical therapy, chiropractic, Medical doctors, medical specialists. They all have the same problem. No knowledge of what is going on with these types of injuries and no way to consistently diagnose them. This is why SmartInjuryDoctors are so important in the market today. I hope that what I just laid out for you is something that you enjoyed because 90% of the patients suffering from back and neck injury should not be working with any doctor who is incapable of diagnosing the underlying condition. Most of these doctors, no matter what their specialty are just making the same mistakes over and over. They end up relying on articles like this one to justify their rush to return patients to the work force. Patients who are still injured and still in pain.

That is what I am trying so hard to change.

With these articles, my podcasts, my videos…I’m trying to reach doctors wherever they are and show them a better way of doing things. That’s what the SmartInjuryDoctors Program is all about. We need the injury market to change because the patients deserve to work with doctors who not only care, but doctors who can get real results. For more information on Spinal Ligament Injuries please check us out at www.smartinjurydoctor.com or check out our SmartInjuryDoctors® Podcasts on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Play or Stitcher. For information on spinal ligament testing by board certified medical radiologists go to www.thespinalkinetics.com

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WHAT IS A SPINAL INSTABILITY?

WHAT IS A SPINAL INSTABILITY?

WHAT IS A SPINAL INSTABILITY?

What I want to talk about today is what is a spinal instability? It seems like there’s all this information out there about spinal instabilities. And matter of fact, I did a video on spinal instabilities six years ago, put it out on YouTube, and it was one of 245 siting’s of spinal instability at that time. I thought it was absolutely crazy that there was not more information on simple spinal instability and understanding that it was the number one cause of chronic pain and disability in the world today.

Spinal Instability Is a Clinical Entity

Obviously, if I fracture your spine and your spinal cord was about to be severed, you would have catastrophic spinal instability. These types of cases would end up in the operating room that day. So, we’re not talking about catastrophic spinal instability due to fractures. What we’re talking about here is spinal instability due to ligament damage.

Spinal instability by definition is excessive motion to the spine. The spine is designed to actually move in very specific, very minute movement patterns that all combine together. It’s both very complex, but very simple at the same time. The thing that holds all these spinal components, all these bones and joints in the right location for that movement pattern are the ligaments. When the ligaments are damaged, there’s excessive motion. It’s that excessive motion which allows the spine to now move in a way that it was not designed to move, which can irritate the nerve, which can cause pain and inflammation.

It Takes More Than Just an X-Ray or MRI

It’s not something that you pick up on an x-ray or on an MRI alone. It’s an entity that you pick up when you detect evidence of excessive motion. The best test for excessive motion is the flexion-extension x-ray. This is a stress radiology and a very accurate measurement of what are called translation and angular patterns. Remember, the spine can move back and forth. When it moves, that’s called a translation pattern. It also angles when it moves, that’s called an angular pattern. So, we can have abnormal translation or abnormal angulation patterns. The more abnormal the pattern is, the more ligament damage there was.

These Types of Patterns Are Not Picked Up On MRI

They’re picked up on stress radiology. They’re picked up on standard x-rays. Standard digital x-rays are the best primary imaging tool to detect this. They’re very inexpensive and very easy to do. When providers get imaging done, when medical doctors get imaging done, they rely on radiologists to read those images or to measure those images. Osteopaths, same thing. Physical therapists, same thing. Chiropractors sometimes try to do this themselves.

Doctors Can Only Be Good at So Many Things

It’s highly recommended, especially in the spinal injury market that this be done independent of the doctor. In the injury market, we want doctors to be very good at treating injuries, not necessarily great at doing all the radiology studies or all the imaging studies that are possibly out there. You can’t be all and everything in the market.

Essentially, a spinal instability is very easy. It’s excessive motion. If you have excessive motion that causes a motor problem with the nerve, (In other words, something’s not able to function now. For example, I can’t move my arm as well. I’m not as strong with the muscle.) that’s a motor problem.

Each spinal level has a motor nerve associated with it which can be tested. So, the doctor’s task is to perform a motor challenge. Different types of muscle tasks for each level to see if that muscle group is strong on both sides. We also have sensory tests. When you have a nerve, there’s a motor component, there’s a sensory component, and there’s a visceral component to it. The motor is making things move. The sensory is sensing things so the body can make control adjustments. And the actual visceral is helping the body’s organs function better. All nerves have these three capacities.

The Two Things Needed to Diagnose Spinal Instability

As I said before, spinal instability is a clinical entity. It means that you have excessive motion on an imaging study that’s now causing a motor sensory or pain problem at that level. So, you have to have two things. You have to have imaging. And you have to have a doctor who knows how to do a correct spinal instability exam. Not all that common today. So, we have to grow doctors that know how to do this very simple exam procedure. It’s a very simple procedure, but not a lot of doctors do it currently in the market and it should be done every single day. Any injury patient should have this done right away.

Once you have a spinal instability, how do you get rid of it?

Well, you treat it. The ligaments have already been damaged. There’s already excessive motion. So, are you going to treat the excessive motion and make that go away? No, that’s generally permanent. But the motor, sensory, or pain problems are not permanent. They can be transient based on the care. So, the care is gaged at rehabilitating the function of the nerve to not cause pain, not lose power or force as in a motor deficit, or to regain its ability to sense. A spinal instability is no longer a spinal instability when the patient becomes asymptomatic. That’s what good doctors are trying to achieve with their patients, be asymptomatic. Really good injury doctors can actually treat spinal instability very, very well.

The good injury doctor also knows that spinal instability is the number one cause of chronic pain and has often been the thing that is most undiagnosed in chronic pain patients. Every patient knows and everyone in the market knows that if you don’t have a proper diagnosis for the condition, (I don’t care if you have cancer, diabetes, spinal pain. No matter what the condition is, if the doctor is not diagnosing it correctly) the chances of getting help are very slim.

It’s Not as Confusing as Many Think, We Just Need More Informed Providers

We need a lot more doctors in my Smart Injury Doctors program and Smart Injury Lawyers program. Throughout the country, we are teaching doctors and lawyers exactly how these procedures should be done so that they can understand exactly how and what a spinal injury patient needs.

For the chiropractic community, a spinal instability is what a spinal subluxation was and is. Today, there’s so much confusion in the chiropractic market around terminology, and subluxation is a great example of that:

  • Do we treat a subluxation or not?
  • Is it a “bad” or “good” word?

I look at it and say, “Look, a spinal subluxation has always been and has always been defined as a vertebra that’s either misaligned through mal static position or mal motion that causes nerve interference.”

It’s a misalignment either in position or in motion that causes nerve interference. The nerve has these three things:

  • Motor
  • Sensory
  • Visceral

A spinal subluxation is identical to a spinal instability. There is no difference. So, anybody that says, “Well, I’m having a hard time. I don’t understand spinal subluxation,” definitely doesn’t understand spinal instability because they’re the same. They’re identical.

This is the number one cause of chronic pain and disability in the world today and we need a lot more professionals that understand this very simple procedure.

It’s simple to diagnose, it’s simple to evaluate, and it’s very simple to treat. The key to it obviously, as with any condition is early detection. Which leads to early proper treatment that leads to much better outcomes. That’s what we need in the market today. Register for our next Webinar to discover more about diagnosing spinal ligament injuries.

Want to learn more about Smartinjurydoctor's Program?

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246 Tierney Drive, Suite 1,
New Richmond, WI 54017

1-800-940-6513, ext 700

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Smart Injury Doctors
701 Richards Ave
Clearwater Florida 33755

[email protected]
Call Lee Ann at 1-800-940-6513, ext 700

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© 2019 Biocybernetics Inc.

Today’s Radiologists Can Help Doctors Accurately Diagnose Spinal Ligament Injuries

Today’s Radiologists Can Help Doctors Accurately Diagnose Spinal Ligament Injuries

Today’s Radiologists Can Help Doctors Accurately Diagnose Spinal Ligament Injuries

Spinal ligament injuries are the number one cause of pain and disability in both the US and the World today. In the past doctors have absolutely struggled to determine the severity and location of these injuries. This fact alone has probably been the biggest reason why this relatively simple injury has caused so much trouble for so many people.

Patients have been walking into their Chiropractor, Osteopath or Medical Specialist with spinal ligament injuries from car accidents, slip and falls, work related incidents, sports related incidents and all manor of other incidents that can cause the spinal ligaments to over stretch and tear. These same patients for far too long now have had these doctors construct a treatment program without knowing the severity and location of the actual ligament injury of the spine. The result of which all too often is a patient that treats for months on end, sometimes years on end and comes out of that process with a chronic problem that does not seem to have any solution. These patients have often been manipulated, massaged, exercised, worked out, drugged, had their nerves burned, and still the condition does not fully resolve.

When conditions do not resolve the cause has not been fully understood. Jeffrey A. Cronk DC, JD

Not an ideal result and is perhaps the biggest reason why over 100 Million people in the US suffer from sort of chronic pain—with neck and back pain being the most common.

Today this no longer needs to happen, and today any doctor can get assistance in determining the location and severity of these injuries with the help of specialized radiologists utilizing sophisticated technology that can allow them to accurately measure “joint laxity” of the individual spinal motion units. Obviously the more laxity the joint has the more damaged the restraints (ligaments) are that are designed to keep it in alignment. Todays modern specialist can now take the inter-segmental motion report, understand where the problem is and set up a much more targeted treatment program to stabilize the now known area of instability. This of course will lead to better results with less care in many cases.

Now doctors can understand exactly where these spinal injuries and their treatment programs can be much more targeted and effective as a result.

For more information on the this national radiology service, doctors can go to www.spinal-kinetics.com For more information on how to become more of your areas spinal ligament injury specialist, providers can go to www.smartinjuryeducation.com

Want to learn more about Smartinjurydoctor's Program?

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246 Tierney Drive, Suite 1,
New Richmond, WI 54017

1-800-940-6513, ext 700

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CONTACT US

Smart Injury Doctors
701 Richards Ave
Clearwater Florida 33755

[email protected]
Call Lee Ann at 1-800-940-6513, ext 700

SEARCH THIS SITE

© 2019 Biocybernetics Inc.