Decompression Research
Here are links to what various scientific and medical communities report
about spinal decompression…
Journal of Neurological Research, October 2001. For any given
patient with low back and referred leg pain, we (the researchers) cannot
predict with certainty which cause has assumed primacy. Therefore surgery,
by being directed at root decompression at the site of the herniation
alone, may not be effective if secondary causes of pain have become predominant.
Decompression therapy, however, addresses both primary and secondary causes
of low back and referred leg pain. We thus submit that Decompression therapy
should be considered first, before the patient undergoes a surgical procedure
which permanently alters the anatomy and function of the affected lumbar
spine segment. Click
here to read the study.
Journal of Neurological Research, October 2001. Same edition,
different study. Dermatosomal Somatosensory Evoked Potential Demonstration
of Nerve Root Decompression After VAX-D Therapy. Reductions in low back
pain and referred leg pain associated with a diagnosis of herniated disc,
degenerative disc disease or facet syndrome have previously been reported
after treatment with a VAX-D table…The object of this study was to use
dermatomal somatosensory evoked potentials (DSSEPs) to demonstrate lumbar
root decompression following VAX-D therapy. Seven consecutive patients
with a diagnosis of low back pain and unilateral or bilateral L5 or S1
radiculopathy were studied. All patients had at least 50% improvement
in radicular symptoms and low back pain and three of them experienced
complete resolution of all symptoms. The average pain reduction was 77%.
Click
here to read the study
Journal of Neurological Research, April 1998. Data was collected
from twenty-two medical centers for patients who received VAX-D therapy
for low back pain, which was sometimes accompanied by referred leg pain.
Only patients who received at least ten sessions and had a diagnosis of
herniated disc, degenerative disc or facet syndrome which were confirmed
by diagnostic imaging, were included in this study; a total of 778 cases.
The treatment was successful in 71% of the 778 cases, when success was
defined as a reduction in pain to 0 or 1, on a 0 to 5 scale. Improvements
in mobility and activities of daily living correlated strongly with pain
reduction. Click
here to read the study.
From Anaethesiology News, March 2003.. Small, non-randomized follow-up
study on the outcomes of decompression therapy on reducing chronic low
back pain. Among 23 patients studied, 71% showed more than a 50% reduction
in pain immediately after treatment, and 86% showed a 50% or better pain
reduction at four years. After four years, 52% of respondents reported
a pain level of zero. Click
here to read the study.
Treatment of Discogenic Low Back Pain presentation, The VAX-D
Therapeutic Table reduces intradiscal pressure to a minus 150mm Hg., effectively
decompressing the disc. With conventional traction intradiscal pressures
either increase, remain the same or slightly decrease. Conventional traction
devices elicit reflex muscle contraction thus interfering with decompression.
The VAX-D table has a time energy distraction curve that is logarithmic,
and we believe this is the reason decompression occurs. Click
here to read the study.
Medical Technologies Group special report on the VAX-D. Low back
problems are expensive. While it is difficult to assess or calculate the
total cost to society, there is strong evidence that both economic and
psychosocial costs are substantial. Since MTG receives so many claims
dealing with patients suffering from disc pathology, our Technology Assessment
Division felt it prudent to study the literature for various treatment
modalities in order to better evaluate the medical necessity of these
types of claims. We particularly chose to study the effects of Vertebral
Axial Decompression on intradiscal pressure. Click
here to read the study.
American Association of Orthopaedic Medicine, 1999, The Science of
Decompression. The following MRI films taken before and after VAX-D
treatments demonstrate reduction of a large extruded herniated disc. The
Radiologist that read and compared the before and after films commented
that he was not aware of “what type of surgery” had been performed but
that it was the most remarkable reduction of an extruded herniated disc
that he had seen. Click
here to read the study.
Journal of Neurosurgery, 1994. Effects of Vertebral Axial Decompression
on Intradiscal Pressure. The object of this study was to examine the effect
of vertebral axial decompression on pressure in the nucleus pulposus of
lumbar discs. Changes in intradiscal pressure were recorded at resting
state and while controlled tension was applied on a VAX-D therapeutic
table. Intradiscal pressure demonstrated an inverse relationship to the
tension applied. Tension in the upper rnage was observed to decompress
the nucleus pulposus significantly, to below -100mm Hg. Click
here to read the study.
Canadian Journal of Medicine, January 1999. Effects of Vertebral
Axial Decompression on Sensory Nerve Dysfunction in Patients with Low
Back Pain and Radiculopathy. The data from this study implies that VAX-D
therapy is capable of influencing sensory nerve dysfunction associated
with a compressive radiculopathy. Motor dysfunction returns before sensory
dysfunction in compressive radiculopathies so it is rather striking that
we observed total remission in 64% of the cases with sensory dysfunction.
It is possible that reduction of intradiscal pressure by VAX-D significantly
alters the biomechanics and biochemistry of the disc and nerve root. Click
here to read the study.
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