
Sacroiliac joint dysfunction is often the undiagnosed cause of low back pain. Excerpts from “Understanding Sacroiliac joint Pain and What You Can Do About It”
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Sacroiliac joint dysfunction is often the undiagnosed cause of low back pain. Excerpts from “Understanding Sacroiliac joint Pain and What You Can Do About It”
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Tags: Back, Pain, Sacroiliac
This entry was posted on Tuesday, June 7th, 2011 and is filed under Back Pain. You can follow any responses to this entry through RSS 2.0. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.
Powered by Yahoo! Answers
#1 by fy5pp on June 7th, 2011
Quote
yes i like the video
#2 by 18wheeler76 on June 7th, 2011
Quote
ive been to 5 differant doctors and not 1 of them metioned this,i have excuriating leg pain from my lower back,nothing showed on ex ray.they said neropathy,bursitis,amd the best of all i had an ortapedic surgeon tell me i have tight hamstrings,cuz he moved my legs in all deifferant directions and i didnt say owe once.its so hard to turnover in bed then when i wake up i have to move as slow as possible and can barley get out of bed due to leg pain,going upstairs hurts as well.im going to tell em.
#3 by BackInsight on June 7th, 2011
Quote
Let your pelvis “slip”as you lengthen your spine.
#4 by healthnut4life48 on June 7th, 2011
Quote
I have fought back pain for the majority of my life, spending thousands of dollars on physical therapy, chiropractors, and pain medicines.
Recently I have found by far the best, most economical help ever. Going through this simple routine every morning has changed my life drastically for the better.
Check it out…
SELFTRAINERMAT. COM
#5 by PureChiropractic on June 7th, 2011
Quote
Thanks for the video!
#6 by alzaincom on June 7th, 2011
Quote
need to buy and download this dvd,
please advise!
#7 by n4979338 on June 7th, 2011
Quote
I require SI joint fusion surgery.
Can anyone tell me a list of names of surgeons who perform the surgery in Australia? And if not the USA/Canada? It is very difficult to find in Australia but I will travel to America if necessary.
My spine mri is normal but I had a serious fall and severe pain around the si joint ever since, $45000 spent on all other treatments over 8 years but little improvement. Can not sit down or lie down or do a host of other tasks. Just want to get my life back.
#8 by dayglowgreendoor on June 7th, 2011
Quote
@robertmartinez Sacroilac joints aren’t meant to be stretched, so yes it can harm the joints to manipulate the joints.
#9 by HealthAndCures on June 7th, 2011
Quote
Check Back Pain And Sciatica Exercise Video Program here: watch?v=3Xt0kkr74xg
#10 by TheKamikazeMAR on June 7th, 2011
Quote
low back pain kills me years and
I was best in the gym but my hollow back
is the problem.
#11 by robertmartinez on June 7th, 2011
Quote
A friend of mine has suffered from the SI Joint problem for 20 years after a car accident. He has tried a bunch of chiropractors. He walks really stiff because of the problem and he says listening to his back CRACK as the chiropractor twists it is psychologically hard. I wonder if his various chiropractors have made his condition WORSE. He really shows PAIN some days.
#12 by robertmartinez on June 7th, 2011
Quote
I’d bet it would feel better. The one problem is that those things, or just hanging upside down, is really hard on the blood pressure… it makes it go up. You might remember as a kid feeling like your head was going to pop when hanging upside down. My own injury is calming down after two months so I’m feeling better. But I experienced enough to understand the need for some type of treatment and I’d bet that stretching the spine out by hanging upside down would feel better.
#13 by adamberk07 on June 7th, 2011
Quote
good question, ive been thinking the same
I have a pull up bar in my door way and after some pull up and hanging (just for a few seconds) i do noticed a bit of difference
#14 by thiefoftime99 on June 7th, 2011
Quote
Good discussion of the problem.
#15 by robertmartinez on June 7th, 2011
Quote
If you’re calling an ‘inverter’ the contraption which you lie upon and then hang upside down with your feet in the air and your head to the floor, I too wondered about that idea. Have you tried it & what happened????
#16 by digg1964 on June 7th, 2011
Quote
Great video. Very informative.
#17 by danndan6 on June 7th, 2011
Quote
took me 20seconds to load and didnt stop.
#18 by itrainsinoctober on June 7th, 2011
Quote
If you have low back pain, mid-back pain, etc., there is a really good book called “Healing Back Pain” by Dr. John Sarno. It conveys, without a doubt, the most Responsible Content on the matter that I have ever come across and is NOT “about” anatomy in general. You can google his name. You can probably find it at your local library if you don’t want to purchase it. P.S. I’ve had 2 discectomies in the past – didn’t know better, and…..yeah, it’s a really worthwhile read.
#19 by teamuggy on June 7th, 2011
Quote
This vid took nearly 20 minutes to play…. so slow
#20 by ProPTRehab on June 7th, 2011
Quote
8 weeks?
#21 by ProPTRehab on June 7th, 2011
Quote
Funny, I found the same findings for people with low back pain; that’s why I r/o L/S 1st, as I would assume you do..
If it were SI, I’d expect a trauma unless a female who’s pregnant or similar; also the studies show manip to SI doesn’t change it’s position (unless lax ligs from hormone involvement, etc..); however, it may provide an ‘impulse’ that can modulate pain. How do you decipher helping them from the natural resolution process? 8 wks is enough time for this.
#22 by dayglowgreendoor on June 7th, 2011
Quote
My SI knocks and pops when I lift my knee up and down to chest level. I have horrible pain, but not when I do that. My pain is in my pelvis and legs, 80% on the right side. It comes from a “club foot” that was not repaired 46 years ago.
#23 by sijproblems on June 7th, 2011
Quote
i don’t know what a cronic stretch is. but if you throw one leg over the other while lying down, does the SI joint pop? if you try the other side, does it not pop?i propose that the side that pops is the more stable side and the side that doesn’t pop, is the fixated – the primary problem side.
#24 by reader1970 on June 7th, 2011
Quote
Is the “chronic stretch” why my joint pops or clicks all the time? Will is stop clicking with stablization? Also, should I not stretch my hip out and to the side? It feels good to release the tension in my SI joint area but am I doing more harm?
#25 by rambakas on June 7th, 2011
Quote
Im seeing a spinal phyiso (in melbourne) for spinal and sacral probs from playing lots of sport, i find theyre much better than chiropractors..they use gentle mobilisaition instead of ‘cracking’ the joint.
Gd luck!