Commentary

Let’s get physical!


 

References

We see many patients in our office with acute or chronic musculoskeletal complaints. Most acute musculoskeletal injuries resolve with rest and a short course of a narcotic or over-the-counter pain medication.

But when pain lingers beyond a few weeks, patients get nervous and so do we. This is the critical time period during which patients may request more narcotic pain medication and/or develop chronic pain syndromes, which are enormously difficult to treat. What treatments can we suggest at this point that have good evidence of effectiveness?

Reassurance. The simplest effective intervention is reassurance—especially from a physician. Patients who are reassured are more likely to recover from low back pain.1 Patients often have unrealistic goals, expecting to be pain free in a couple of weeks, whereas the natural healing of soft tissue injuries takes 8 to 12 weeks (and sometimes longer) for more severe injuries.

Physical modalities. Nearly all of the other non-medicinal, effective interventions for subacute and chronic musculoskeletal pain are physical in nature. The article by Slattengren et al provides an evidence-based review of osteopathic manipulation techniques (OMT) for pain and other conditions, as well. The evidence for the effectiveness of OMT for low back pain is the strongest.

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