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Dr. Le's Chiropractic & Wellness, L.L.C.'s Use of Hot/Cold Therapy

In office, we have the ability to use an array of therapies to assist your spine in healing. Depending on your symptom, one or more of the following may be recommended:

Cryotherapy (Cold Therapy)

Purpose: Cold therapy stimulates vasoconstriction, the narrowing of blood vessels to slow down blood circulation in an area.

  • Cold therapy reduces pain and swelling after an injury.
  • It is the preferred therapy for spinal pain within the first 72 hours.
  • Cold reduces the flow of fluid into tissues and slows the chemicals that inflame and cause pain.
  • Cold reduces swelling and bleeding and nerve ending conduction of pain impulses.
  • Deep tissue cooling with ice reduces muscle spasm by lessening muscle contraction.

Note: If you have circulation issues, can’t feel cold or are allergic to cold, ice may not be the recommended therapy for you and may not be applied.

Application: A towel is always placed between you and the cold pack. Since swelling and pain often accompany acute injury in the first 72 hours after an injury, ice only may be applied. Ice reduces swelling and numbs the pain in short spurts like 10 minutes at a time.

Auburn chiropractic application of cold therapy

Thermotherapy (Heat Therapy)

Purpose: Heat therapy fosters vasodilation, the enlarging of blood vessels to bring more blood to an area.

  • Heat is typically sedating due to its ability to decrease the transmission of pain signals and calm tense muscles.
  • Heat opens blood vessels around a painful area, increasing oxygen and nutrient flow to the muscles which aids in healing damaged tissue.
  • Heat also lowers stiffness and increases flexibility which is most important in a healthy back to assist you in taking back your quality of life.

Application: In office, hot packs may be used on your spine with a towel around them for 10 to 30 minutes.

heat in Auburn chiropractic office

 

Cryotherapy/Thermotherapy Combined (Hot/Cold/Hot Therapy)

Purpose: Combining cryotherapy and thermotherapy is generally preferred. This generates stimulation of blood flow by bringing blood into an inflamed and painful area with heat and pushing out the blood with an ice pack application.

Application: For nearly all of the patients coming to our office, a 10 minute hot/10 minute cold/10 minute hot routine is used. This routine is known as the Hunting’s Effect whereby too long an ice session reflexively pushes the blood back into the swollen area resulting in more pain. Hunting’s Effect is useful to the body when you may find yourself in trouble of severe cold, but not when attempting to control pain and swelling. Heat calms muscles and joints and cold drives out swelling. A combination of the two is best.

 
Cryotherapy/Thermotherapy/Electrotherapy Combined

Purpose: Often this hot/cold/hot therapy is applied along with electrical stimulation which is doubly-effective for your pain relief. This produces stimulation of blood flow by drawing blood into an inflamed and painful area with heat and pushing out the blood with ice pack application and nerve pain sedation with electrotherapy.

Application: Generally each modality with cryotherapy or thermotherapy is 10 minutes each but may vary depending on your condition.

 heat therapy with electrical stimulation
(1) heat with electroptherapy 
 
 electrical stimulation combined with ice
(2) cryotherapy with electrotherapy 
"This information and website content is not intended to diagnose, guarantee results, or recommend specific treatment or activity. It is designed to educate and inform only. Please consult your physician for a thorough examination leading to a diagnosis and well-planned treatment strategy. See more details on the DISCLAIMER page. Content is reviewed by Dr. James M. Cox I."