Skip to product information
1 of 1

Pain Institute

Joint and Other Types of Pain in Deforming Arthrosis

Joint and Other Types of Pain in Deforming Arthrosis

Regular price $2.99 USD
Regular price Sale price $2.99 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Quantity
The need to eliminate non-joint sources of pain, as an essential component of pain management for patients with deforming arthrosis, has only been understood in recent years. To establish this important direction in the rehabilitation of arthrosis patients in clinical practice more rapidly, the author presents previously untapped pain-relief therapy resources in a form accessible to the general reader. Issues relating to pain are closely tied to other important aspects of this problem.
The principles of the individualized approach to slowing the course of the disease in an affected joint are presented, and the role of natural factors in maintaining prolonged remission of the disease is clarified. Answers to patients' frequently-asked questions will be found at the end of the book to help the reader better understand the problem of pain.
The book is intended for physicians of all specialties. It will be also of useful to patients who are interested in obtaining the correct understanding of the nature of their disease and conservative treatment methods that have become available with the recent discovery of a fundamental law in pain medicine.

Features:
• Discovery of patterns in the formation of pain events both within and without the damaged joint. Three launch mechanisms have been identified that participate in the formation of pain syndromes arising in the given disorder: the joint mechanism in the form of the damaged synovial membrane, and two extrasynovial mechanisms - muscle imbalance in extremities and osteoreflexive disruptions.
• Specially developed and highly effective methods of pain therapy that account for the specifics of the morphological substrate of pain, the reversibility of changes in tissues within the afflicted area and the severity of functional disruptions in the damaged limb.
• An examination of the principles governing an individualized approach to the stabilization of pathological processes within the damaged joint by means of conservative treatment. At the foundation of the individualized approach lie a division of methods of conservative therapy according to degree of their effect on joint cartilage, and the application of such methods according to the level of compensation for intrasynovial changes.
View full details