SociallyChallenged
Elite
- Mar 22, 2002
- 10,483
- 32
- 81
Not yet. I probably should, but every time I've gone - for a shoulder issue, back pain, hamstring injury, knee issue - I've been given the same damn "give it rest" advice.
My compromise was this: no barbell training until February. If it hasn't healed by then, go see someone. The tough question is who? GP? Chiro? Some sort of back specialist (how do I find one)?
Well, it honestly depends. If you're quite concerned, going to the orthopedic surgeon is the best to get imaging (x-rays, MRI) right out of the gate. In addition, they tend to be pretty easy to say, "Hey, I know I have this injury, I want to pursue conservative therapy immediately. Could you give me a prescription for physical therapy?" In my experience, they will always give you one, unless you are debilitated by pain. Then they'll require imaging first. With that, you can ask them about a physical therapy clinic around you. Some have their own physical therapy clinics, which is illegal in the state of CA so I'm not sure I'd go there. Some know of good physical therapists and will go ahead and give you their info. Either way, you need to get a general prescription that says "Physical therapy" on it. You'll bring that to whoever you see so that they can bill your insurance.
You can see a GP and they'll give you a prescription as well, but if you actually want imaging, they'll take longer. Again, if you tell them you want a prescription for PT, they'll most likely give it to you.
I don't have anything against chiropractors, but I don't support manipulations, especially with disc injury. You need selective mobilization, postural re-training (likely), stretching exercises, and strengthening exercises. The only field I know that does that consistently is physical therapy.