@dita4911 - yes, even with osteoporosis there is much that can be done. Even a surgeon should be having you try everything possible before surgery. Send me a note to my handle @gmail.com and I'll see about directing you to someone who could help.
@askthebodyworker Hi !please tell me, if somebody has osteoporosis and kyphosis you still can help?due to the fragile bones?Thank you very much for your time.
@MusicalDarkHorse could you please tell me more about your surgery ?What is the name of surgery? And osteoporosis is or not a contraindications of this surgery I mean maybe the age is important -thank you very much
As a candidate for this surgery, I feel you are a VERY biased information source. Firstly, yoga is a general wellness "course", which barely, if at all, helps; due to the fact that Kyphosis affects the Thoracic spine which one has VERY little muscular control over anyway. Secondly, stretching tends to worsen the problem, often damaging the vertebrae by forcing them into abnormal positions, this is due to their inherent "wedge" shape, as opposed to a normal "block shape"
my friend has it and he still has it he is very stubborn when i tell him to get help and he is deathly afriad of needles i just want my friend to make it past 20
If your curvature is due to wedging of vertebrae like mine is and you're past adolescence, then I'm pretty sure nothing short of surgery can correct it. I've been living with kyphosis and the chronic pain that comes with it for almost 20 years and it really sucks.
Can't say as I've ever seen this variation on Harrington rods ever work in the long run. I've been treating this sort of thing for 20 years, need nothing but my hands and have a great success rate - all with no pain to the client. There are other solutions out there - keep looking, folks.
@askthebodyworker What about degenerative arthritis that is in the same area as the kyphosis?
ChaosTheory0 1 month ago
@dita4911 - yes, even with osteoporosis there is much that can be done. Even a surgeon should be having you try everything possible before surgery. Send me a note to my handle @gmail.com and I'll see about directing you to someone who could help.
askthebodyworker 1 month ago
@askthebodyworker Hi !please tell me, if somebody has osteoporosis and kyphosis you still can help?due to the fragile bones?Thank you very much for your time.
dita4911 1 month ago
@MusicalDarkHorse could you please tell me more about your surgery ?What is the name of surgery? And osteoporosis is or not a contraindications of this surgery I mean maybe the age is important -thank you very much
dita4911 1 month ago
@scorpionboy3
As a candidate for this surgery, I feel you are a VERY biased information source. Firstly, yoga is a general wellness "course", which barely, if at all, helps; due to the fact that Kyphosis affects the Thoracic spine which one has VERY little muscular control over anyway. Secondly, stretching tends to worsen the problem, often damaging the vertebrae by forcing them into abnormal positions, this is due to their inherent "wedge" shape, as opposed to a normal "block shape"
MasterChaoko 3 months ago
Whatever you do don´t go for surgery, only as a last resort. Try some yoga and some streghtin first.
scorpionboy3 4 months ago
my friend has it and he still has it he is very stubborn when i tell him to get help and he is deathly afriad of needles i just want my friend to make it past 20
peeweess60 4 months ago
i have a friend who had to go through this due to really bad scholiosis! he said the operation ok... but recovery hurts!!!
legoclockfreak710 5 months ago
If your curvature is due to wedging of vertebrae like mine is and you're past adolescence, then I'm pretty sure nothing short of surgery can correct it. I've been living with kyphosis and the chronic pain that comes with it for almost 20 years and it really sucks.
Cornbag 5 months ago
Can't say as I've ever seen this variation on Harrington rods ever work in the long run. I've been treating this sort of thing for 20 years, need nothing but my hands and have a great success rate - all with no pain to the client. There are other solutions out there - keep looking, folks.
askthebodyworker 5 months ago