Do Herniated Discs Always Cause Pain? Hamburg NY

This is fact that should shock those of you who are being told that the herniated disc that was found on your MRI is the cause of your back pain. Do not get lulled into the idea that because something showed up on your MRI that this means that the abnormal finding is automatically the cause of your pain.

James J Dragonette
716-648-6161
4735 Southwestern Blvd. 
Hamburg, NY
Jeffrey F Fix
716-649-7082
246 Buffalo St.  
Hamburg, NY
Kimberly E. Backlas Cowdrick
(716) 771-2923
3445 Orchard Park Road
Orchard Park, NY
Nicholas J Dragonette
716-675-0515
3405 Orchard Park Rd. 
Orchard Park, NY
John J Nowak
716-825-4121
817 Abbott Rd. 
Buffalo, NY
Mark D. Sokolowski
716-648-3311
5893 Camp Rd.
Hamburg, NY
Richard D Hallett
716-597-8913
31 Woodhaven Rd. 
Orchard Park, NY
Lawrence J. Adymy
716-662-2225
3905 N. Buffalo Rd. 
Orchard Park, NY
Brian C. Punturiero
716-572-3614
125 Sheffield Ave. 
Buffalo, NY
Shelly Boyle
716-712-2708
2732 Transit Rd. 
West Seneca, NY
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Do Herniated Discs Always Cause Pain?

This is fact that should shock those of you who are being told that the herniated disc that was found on your MRI is the cause of your back pain. Do not get lulled into the idea that because something showed up on your MRI that this means that the abnormal finding is automatically the cause of your pain.  I have shown that the cause of lower back pain in most cases was a muscle in spasm that attached to the spine in this area.  Resolution of pain came from stretching this muscle group and strengthening the opposing muscles.

It is critical to understand that the material that a herniated disc is made from, fibrous cartilage, has no pain receptors in it. That means that pain can not be experienced by a vertebral disc. Any one in the medical field should be aware of this very basic fact.

Knowing this, the next question to be explained, is if the disc cannot cause the symptom then is something else causing it. The so-called "experts" will tell you that the cause is not the herniated disc, but that the herniated disc is impinging on a nerve root. A nerve root is an extension of the spinal cord which comes out at every level of the spinal column. What is important to understand is that each nerve root innervates a very localized area of skin. For instance, if the L45 nerve root were impinged enough to create a symptom, the symptom would only be experienced at the inner shin. If an individual had a symptom anywhere else or if the symptom was experienced in an area larger than this region, the symptom could not be the result of an impinged L45 nerve root...

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