Article from the Yoga Journal Jan/Feb 01 Issue:

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Sugar Fix for Torn Ligaments
Doctor prescribes injections of glucose and
herbs to get yogis back on the mat.
The Hippocratic Oath requires doctors to "do no
harm." But sometimes the road to healing takes an unlikely detour. For
example, Hippocrates treated back pain by lancing hot pins into the
vertebrae of patients. It sounds barbaric, but it worked. The new injury
helped heal the old one.
When yoga teacher Richard Freeman sprained his sacroiliac joint, he
turned to an orthopedic treatment called prolotherapy, based on the
same principles Hippocrates used. "Prolotherapy works like certain types
of acupuncture," explains Dr. Allen Thomashefsky (www.drtom.net),
the orthopedist and Ashtanga Yoga student who treated Freeman, "applying
injections of herbs and dextrose, or sugar, to microscopically re-injure
ligaments and stimulate a new healing cycle."
Unlike muscle and bone, ligaments heal very slowly. Since the body's
reconstructive processes stop a few weeks after an injury, even a moderate
sprain can leave you with ligaments that never get a chance to heal
completely. Then, like a door with loose hinges, these damaged ligaments
allow your bones to swing out of alignment in the joint, leading to
cramped muscles, inflammation, pain, and eventually arthritis. To jump-start
the healing process, Thomashefsky uses a mildly irritating solution
of dextrose he calls "sweet shots" injected directly into the stretched
or torn connective tissue. Over several weeks the body reacts by sending
"fibroblasts"connective tissue buildersto the area. These
biological repairmen lay down new, fibrous cells wherever they detect
damage. The new cells strengthen the joint capsule and restore stability.
The repaired tissue can be up to 40 percent stronger.
Research published in the Journal of Spinal Disorder in 1993
shows prolotherapy leads to substantial improvement in over 80 percent
of patients. Even the conservative Dr. C. Everett Koop, former United
States Surgeon General, calls himself a true "believer." Koop turned
to prolotherapy after two neurological clinics diagnosed him with incurable
back pain. Prolotherapy proved them wrong. And because yoga students
generally lead healthy lives, they enjoy an excellent rate of recovery.
Prolotherapy costs $250 to $400 a session,
and many private insurance policies cover the treatment.
By Fernando Pagés Ruiz
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Allen Thomashefsky, M.D., P.C.:
allen@drtom.net
64 3rd Street, Ashland, OR 97520, (541) 488-5667
2320 Bath Sreet, Suite 313, Santa Barbara, CA 93105, (805) 962-2662
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