Sciatica is the pain we experience when our sciatic nerve is irritated. The irritation can be caused by structures pressing on the nerve, such as a prolapsed disc, or inflamed muscle tissue.
Steve came to see me for help with his sciatica, after several sessions he recalls his experience with acupuncture, and how it helped him… ‘My GP recommended that I consider a course of acupuncture treatment after diagnosing me with sciatica and prescribing me codeine to help manage the pain, which was more intense than anything I’d ever experienced before in my life. Three days later I met Rachel, still bent-double with pain and struggling even to lever myself onto the treatment couch. She started by asking me a number of detailed questions about my condition; how had it occurred, where exactly was the pain, how painful was it, and so forth? Rachel also asked me what I knew about acupuncture - which was not a lot - and what I was hoping to achieve by the treatment? This detailed questioning was to characterise my whole experience with Rachel; she started every subsequent session with a review of what I had done since our last treatment, where the pain was now and how, if any, the pain had reduced? At our initial session, Rachel concluded that a mix of acupuncture and massage would optimise my chances of a speedy recovery, supplemented by a regime of daily walks; just a few steps at first, but eventually increasing to an hour a day. The massages were deep and intensive, but really relaxed my muscles. These were always followed by the acupuncture, with needles applied along the length of my right leg and lower back. I was pleasantly surprised that inserting the needles was virtually painless, merely the tiniest of pricks on occasions and sometimes I was even unaware that they had even been inserted. Rachel would then leave me for approximately 20 minutes for the needles to do their stuff, with the room darkened and some music playing softly in the background. I always found this very relaxing and on more than one occasion fell asleep; a real blessing, as I did not sleep well for the first month or so after my sciatica started. After each session, the pain was noticeably eased and I was able to walk more freely. Equally important, I also undoubtedly benefited emotionally from doing something positive to help the healing process. Within a couple of weeks I had stopped taking the codeine and all pain-killers after about a month. Over the course of the next 6 weeks, I had around one treatment per week on average and I am convinced they played an important part in my speedy recovery. I then went on a long-planned trips to the Maldives and whilst the 14 hour flight was not completely pain-free, it was far more comfortable than I could have ever imagined, further helped by some exercises which Rachel had recommended. Now, some 3 months after first developing sciatica, I am completely mobile, pain-free and exercising as normal, a great testament to Rachel’s expertise’. If you’d like to know more about sciatica, get in touch or for more information. Or take a look at my last blog. (Image courtesy of York Clinic)
2 Comments
2/5/2021 04:29:54 am
Thanks for the article. True that most placement of needles are virtually painless. It's a shame that so many of the public believe the opposite.
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AuthorRachel Hemblade Archives
February 2024
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