Back Pain Relief Zion IL

By Catherine Guthrie I had my first backache at age 12. It crept up on me after two weeks at a summer horseback riding camp. The unease started as periodic muscle soreness, then progressed into spasms, and ultimately settled into a continuous throb. My pediatrician diagnosed scoliosis (lateral curvature of the spine) and told my mother not to worry; the curve was a mild one. But things only got...

NovaCare Rehabilitation - Gurnee
(847) 943-9925
15 Tower Court, Ste. 235
Gurnee, IL
Promotion
We accept all major medical insurance Not Medicaid certified
Hours
Monday 11:00 AM - 7:30 PM
Tuesday 7:00 AM - 3:30 PM
Wednesday 11:00 AM - 7:30 PM
Thursday 11:00 AM - 7:30 PM
Friday 7:00 AM - 1:00 PM
Saturday Closed
Sunday Closed
Services
Physical Therapists, Sports Medicine

Omni Orthopedic Physical Therapy
(262) 373-8643
10116 Stellar Ave #100
Sturtevant, WI
Hours
Monday 8:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Tuesday 8:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Wednesday 8:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Thursday 8:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Friday 8:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Saturday Closed
Sunday Closed
Services
Geriatrics, Occupational Therapy, Orthopaedics Certified Specialist, Orthopedic Care, Physical Therapists, Sports Medicine, Workers Comp/Rehabilitation

Zeungeon Mark Hongs
(847) 244-0401
68 Ambrogio Drive
Gurnee, IL
Specialty
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Data Provided by:
Jason Dean Johnson
(847) 244-9740
1790 Nations Dr Ste 106
Gurnee, IL
Specialty
Sports Medicine

Data Provided by:
Stuart R Kortebein
(847) 688-6755
3001a Sixth Street
Great Lakes, IL
Specialty
Sports Medicine

Data Provided by:
Tender Touch Therapy
(262) 891-4250
5219 88th Ave
Kenosha, WI
Hours
Monday 7:30 AM - 6:00 PM
Tuesday 7:30 AM - 6:00 PM
Wednesday 7:30 AM - 6:00 PM
Thursday 7:30 AM - 6:00 PM
Friday 7:30 AM - 6:00 PM
Saturday Closed
Sunday Closed
Services
Aquatic Therapy, Neuro Rehabilitation, Occupational Therapy, Pediatrics, Physical Therapists, Sports Medicine

Hardik A Vashi
(262) 656-3525
6308 8th Ave
Kenosha, WI
Specialty
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Data Provided by:
Scott Morris
(847) 263-0480
1800 Nations Dr Ste 101
Gurnee, IL
Specialty
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Occupational Medicine

Data Provided by:
Gregory N Rocco
(262) 948-6839
10400 75th St
Kenosha, WI
Specialty
Family Practice, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Data Provided by:
Janice M Krakora Looby, MD
(845) 342-7344
1475 E Belvidere Rd Ste 315
Grayslake, IL
Specialties
Pediatrics, Sports Medicine-Pediatrics
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Rush Med Coll Of Rush Univ, Chicago Il 60612
Graduation Year: 1987
Hospital
Hospital: Highland Park Hosp, Highland Park, Il; Lake Forest Hosp, Lake Forest, Il
Group Practice: Park Pediatrics

Data Provided by:
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Get Your Back Back

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By Catherine Guthrie

I had my first backache at age 12. It crept up on me after two weeks at a summer horseback riding camp. The unease started as periodic muscle soreness, then progressed into spasms, and ultimately settled into a continuous throb. My pediatrician diagnosed scoliosis (lateral curvature of the spine) and told my mother not to worry; the curve was a mild one.

But things only got worse when I started school that fall. I swallowed prescription pain pills at lunch, fidgeted through class, and stood in the back of school assemblies, unable to endure the torture of sitting on a metal folding chair for more than a few minutes at a time.

My alarmed parents called the doctor, who recommended bed rest. At his urging, I became a couch potato. I quit the basketball team and sat on the sidelines during PE. Once a whirling dervish of energy, I spent my afternoons lying on a heating pad in front of the television, watching The Brady Bunch until my eyes burned.

As it turns out, his prescription may have been the worst health advice I’ve ever received.

Four months of inactivity later, the pain had become debilitating. Unable to sit through a full day of classes, I slunk to the principal’s office every day at lunch and waited for my mother to drive me home to the couch. One night I overheard my parents murmuring the word “surgery,” and two weeks after my 13th birthday I had a spinal fusion, which left me with a metal rod in the middle of my back.

After my operation, I spent years walking on eggshells, terrified the rod would break if I put too much stress on it. My well-meaning parents fanned my fear by warning me away from sports I’d loved. Scared I’d wind up needing another painful operation, I heeded their advice.

Much as I hated the sedentary life, I can’t fault my parents or the doctors. In the 1980s, the standard advice for any twinge, pull, or ache in the back was three to four weeks of bed rest. Not so today.

Of course, it’s not front-page news that back experts are telling patients to get moving after two or three days in bed. What is news is how vigorous their prescriptions for getting physical have become. James Rainville, one of the country’s foremost experts on exercise and back pain—he’s chief of physical medicine and rehabilitation at the Spine Center at New England Baptist Hospital in Boston—doesn’t mince words. “Unless you stress your muscles at or near their physiological limits, you will not see any real change.”

In his ten-session program, called aggressive rehabilitation, patients lift weights, climb stairs, and move and twist in ways that would never have been considered possible for someone whose back had once landed him or her in bed. Part of the rationale for this approach is a new understanding of the mind-body connection and its role in pain.

But even for more cautious types who don’t want to go anywhere near a weight machine, there’s new advice about the best way to get moving. For long-term relief, ...

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