Acupuncture Questions Acupuncture

How can I fix my chronic pain?

I have chronic neck pain. Is there any method to fix it?

14 Answers

Acupuncture. It may take a while.
Acupuncture has a good record on treating painful conditions. Depending on where is your pain and the origin of your pain. I can design a treatment plan that can help you reduce your chronic pain. Please call or visit my webpage to set an appointment
Neck Pain is a common complaint. Acupuncture, massage, electrical muscle stimulation , auricular therapy are great treatment combination to start. Sent from Mail<https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows
Acupuncture is often very helpful for chronic pain. Typically the treatment protocol is one treatment per week for 8 weeks, and then we try to space treatments out to see if you can go two, three, and four weeks while still maintaining your results. However, this depends on a number of factors, and patients may need longer weekly treatment, for example, if they have had pain for many years. In that case, 12 weekly treatments may be recommended before spacing treatments out. It can also depend on the nature of the pain, and the original cause of the pain. Some patients require monthly maintenance treatments to continue feeling good, while others do not. It's very individual. But I recommend trying acupuncture as a gentle, non-drug option for chronic pain with very few (if any) side effects.
Probably. But you have not given me much to go on here. Like what testing has been done or hoe the injury started.
We start with 6 sessions at 2x a week for 3 weeks. Everyone responses differently to treatment but usually expect you to be 30-40% better by the 6th session. Then we will taper down to every other week, so on and so forth.
Acupuncture and acupressure can relieve and cure with time
Acupuncture can fix your chronic neck pain.
Acupuncture
Chronic neck pain can surely be treated. In my field of Ear Reflexology, I would have to do an intake on the phone or at your first visit and I could suggest a plan ot treatments according to your history. Every person that comes are different and have a different solution on their own ears.

The chronic pain may come from a long-ago car accident, a rough sport injury, a blow on your head or an inflammation. Visiting me would allow me to identify the muscles, bones or organ that can create your pain.

Booking your self a visit to an Ear Reflexologist would bring you near the healing phase and possibly a more energetic life, for sure.
We will exam 1st. Then provide dry needling 1st. Patients will find instant results in general.
Depending on patients’ medical histories and conditions, each patient will have different responses. Patients will have to follow up in 3-7days depending on severity.
Patients will be examined again on how much difference they have experienced since the initial acupuncture treatment.
Then we can give patients a plan for symptomatology.
If we find limitations in improvements, we will apply different plans as a holistic approach.
Try acupuncture. It works for almost any chronic pain, and neck pain is pretty easy to treat.
If your neck pain is chronic, you will need multiple sessions per week for a period of time. Then you can decrease sessions to once a week once it is under control. You need a private consultation to discuss your pain issue.
There are lots of potential treatments for chronic neck pain. Which one you choose to pursue is going to have a lot to do with why you have chronic neck pain - which hasn't been specified here.

Acupuncture does well with almost any kind of pain, anywhere on the body, and occurring for any reason.

Physical therapy is an option as is chiropractic.

Steroid injection, epidural, or prolo-therapy can sometimes provide significant relief. If this pain is due to arthritis, it should be noted that over the long run steroid injection will erode the joint further leading to more pain.

Structured exercise to help rebuild the muscles of the neck and upper back will often help.

Massage can sometimes help.

Conventional pain management using prescription medications can sometimes provide relief.

Sometimes spinal issues rise to the level of surgical intervention.

And sometimes it takes multiple items from this list to help get the pain under control. Everyone wants for there to be one thing that always works. Unfortunately, at least in my experience, this is rarely the case.