Chronic Pain Specialist Northport AL

A car accident damaged the nerves in Wagner’s lower back and pelvis and left her with sciatica—a set of symptoms that included sharp, stabbing pain in the low back and fatigue and numbness in one leg. Like the 76 million other Americans who suffer from chronic pain annually, Wagner could find no simple cure for her anguish. Her doctors prescribed pain medications, of course, but the pills only provided short'term relief and left her feeling drugged and unlike herself.

Alexandre Todorov, MD
(205) 333-2626
1325 McFarland Blvd Ste 201
Northport, AL
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Centre Med Univ, Fac De Med, Geneve, Switzerland (Univ De Geneve)
Graduation Year: 1963

Data Provided by:
Ashraf Ahsan Syed
(205) 333-7075
2702 Hospital Dr
Northport, AL
Specialty
Pediatric Neurology

Data Provided by:
Jacqueline Rose Ansell, MD
(205) 345-6774
511 Energy Center Blvd Ste 701
Northport, AL
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Dalhousie Univ, Fac Of Med, Halifax, Ns, Canada
Graduation Year: 1989
Hospital
Hospital: Northport Hosp -D C H, Northport, Al
Group Practice: Druid Medical Consultants

Data Provided by:
Arturo Juan Otero, MD
(205) 345-3881
701 University Blvd E Ste 810
Tuscaloosa, AL
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Inst Tech De Santo Dom (Intec), Esc De Med, Fac De Med, Santo Domingo
Graduation Year: 1978

Data Provided by:
L Fernando Franco, MD
(205) 759-0564
200 University Blvd
Tuscaloosa, AL
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Nac Mayor De San Marcos, Prog Acad De Med Humana, Lima, Peru
Graduation Year: 1970

Data Provided by:
Gabriel L Fernandez Pla, MD
(205) 333-2626
1325 McFarland Blvd Ste 201
Northport, AL
Specialties
Neurological Surgery
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Complutense De Madrid, Fac De Med, Madrid, Spain
Graduation Year: 1959

Data Provided by:
Gary Roderick Kilgo, MD
(205) 339-3332
PO Box 467
Northport, AL
Specialties
Neurology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Al Sch Of Med, Birmingham Al 35294
Graduation Year: 1979

Data Provided by:
Rickey Lee McKenzie, MD
(205) 752-0441
701 University Blvd E Ste 702
Tuscaloosa, AL
Specialties
Neurological Surgery
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Wayne State Univ Sch Of Med, Detroit Mi 48201
Graduation Year: 1988

Data Provided by:
Bryan Steven Givhan, MD
(205) 752-0441
701 University Blvd E Ste 702
Tuscaloosa, AL
Specialties
Neurological Surgery
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Al Sch Of Med, Birmingham Al 35294
Graduation Year: 1989

Data Provided by:
Brian Hogan
(205) 345-3881
100 Rice Mine Road Loop Ste 301
Tuscaloosa, AL
Specialty
Neurology

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No Pain, All Gain

Provided by: 

By Matthew Solan

For seven months, Elizabeth Wagner felt constantly on guard. In conversation, she only half listened; the other half of her attention focused fiercely on the intense pain that shot from her hip down to her heel and back up again. When she slept, her body shook itself awake whenever she rolled into a position that triggered the pain. She worked standing up because she could only sit for 20 minutes before the aches would become unbearable. “I could never get a free moment to relax,” says Wagner, 32, a nurse in San Diego. “After the accident, I always waited for the pain to arrive. The pain was in control of me.”

A car accident damaged the nerves in Wagner’s lower back and pelvis and left her with sciatica—a set of symptoms that included sharp, stabbing pain in the low back and fatigue and numbness in one leg. Unlike the acute pain you feel when you burn a finger, break an arm, or sprain an ankle, chronic pain like Wagner’s doesn’t subside and can linger longer than six months—sometimes for years. The pain can strike your nerves, joints, or muscles and feels like a dull, nagging ache, a steady throb, a sharp jab, or any and all of the above.

Like the 76 million other Americans who suffer from chronic pain annually, Wagner could find no simple cure for her anguish. Her doctors prescribed pain medications, of course, but the pills only provided short-term relief and left her feeling drugged and unlike herself.

Because doctors don’t fully understand chronic pain, they often choose to fight the symptom rather than examine its underlying causes. And with so few alternatives presented to them, many people assume they have to live with their suffering. But that’s not the takeaway message. “Pain is your body’s way of telling you what it needs,” says Jacob Teitelbaum, MD, author of Pain Free 1-2-3 (McGraw Hill, 2006). “Think of it like your car’s dashboard. When a light flashes—whether it’s the oil, the fuel gauge, or an engine light—it’s a signal your car requires attention. Chronic pain works the same way. It’s your body’s way of saying it needs help.”

So how do you help your body? Attack the pain from different angles, and give your body everything it needs to put up the good fight. This means you need to soothe inflammation, boost energy, increase strength and movement, and support and comfort your body as needed. Here’s a four-step plan to do it right.

Get enough sleep. Easier said than done sometimes, but your body needs a full night of quality shut-eye to fight pain. “Sleep creates growth hormones in your body that stimulate tissue repair and allow you to recover from chronic pain,” says Teitelbaum. “If you don’t get enough sleep, between eight or nine hours, you don’t give your body the chance to heal.” In fact a recent study found that patients with chronic pain who were sleep deprived for two days reported more widespread pain and showed a slower repair cycle than their more rested counterparts.

If your p...

Author: Matthew Solan

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