Many orthopedists make an incorrect assumption
that once a piece of disc material is "herniated,
bulged, or protruded" it can only be managed surgically.
The witnessed successes (see TESTIMONIALS)
of The O'Connor Technique
(tm), routinely experienced, prove that this
opinion is not based upon fact. Certainly, acting upon
the belief that this mechanical problem can be solved
constitutes one of the major advances in medical understanding
that are engendered in The
O'Connor Technique. In fact, it needs to be
understood by the back pain, neck pain, backache, or spinal
pain sufferers that their pain
is most likely created by physical, understandable, mechanical,
forces--not some mysterious entity beyond the average
intellect.
It is no leap in logic that mechanical
problems have mechanical solutions, the MANEUVERS
are those mechanical solutions. Moving the spinal joints
(the disc units) through simple postural changes and easily
performed body adjustments (using EXTENSIONS, FLEXIONS,
TRACTION, etc.) can change the anatomical alignment and
positions of disc material; therefore, it is not too difficult
to learn how to "manipulate" your own spine
in a similar fashion as a chiropractor.
By reading elsewhere in this webbook, the
reader has had the opportunity to familiarize him or herself
with the anatomical/mechanical abnormalities associated
with discogenic pain (see PHYSICAL
REALITY); but, up until now, the practical directions
for the actual movements, stretches and postures have
not been described. The contents delineated as MANEUVERS
are dedicated to describing The
O'Connor Technique (tm) "SPINAL
PAIN MANEUVERS." They are arguably the most
mechanically and physically important components of this
book and comprise, in large part, the fundamental, actively
beneficial, constituent of The
O'Connor Technique (tm).
Upon purchase of a MEMBERSHIP,
the reader will be directed to an image map whereon they
will select the area of their pain. They will then be
linked to another page where they will be given a number
of MANEUVER choices, their use depending upon the particular
circumstance of the reader. If a bed is available, the
reader can choose a bed upon which to perform the MANEUVERS.
If the reader has access to large couch pillows, those
MANEUVERS can be chosen that utilize pillows. There are
also MANEUVERS that can be done while standing with a
table or other platform, seated in a chair (as partially
depicted above), or over the edge of a couch, depending
upon the site of pain and the availability of the required
platforms. The MANEUVER instructions were designed so
as not to require any expensive devices or equipment other
than that which can be found in most households without
difficulty or substantial cost. The directions, although
seemingly lengthy, have been written so that the average
lay person can safely perform them in the privacy of their
own home within about an hour's time spent reading. It
is not absolutely necessary to read the entire 400 page
book to be able to accomplish a MANEUVER. A painful spine,
especially the low back, can reasonably be expected to
be relieved of pain within a short amount of time. In
actual clinical practice, the author can diagnose, instruct
in the acting principles, and guide a patient through
the maneuvers in 30-60 minutes with over a 75% success
rate of substantially relieving the pain. The author had
been teaching this technique for years before finally
writing down the directions so an office visit was unnecessary
and the readers could self-treat. Since then, the instructions
were given to enough people without one-on-one guidance
to convince the author that a motivated person with average
intelligence could successfully perform the MANEUVERS
simply by reading the instrucitons. Countless others,
who were personally instructed have returned to Dr. O'Connor
in his practice for other reasons only to relate that
they have not had any significant pain for years; and,
if they do, they simply do a MANEUVER to instantly relieve
it.
To this author's knowledge, these directions
on how to perform this unique type of self-administered
physical therapy are not available anywhere else in the
medical, chiropractic, physical therapy, or lay literature.
The author intentionally did not publish them in the scientific
medical literature because to do so causes one to surrender
their copyrights to the publisher. Then, there would have
been no financial reward for all the work it took to develop,
because anyone and everyone could simply go to the published
source.
The knowledge of these MANEUVERS did not
come to the author as a result of sitting at a computer
with schematic vertebral designs moving through three
dimensional, two hundred and fifty six color, cyberspace
with a committee of government-granted University level
orthopedists and neurosurgeons mulling over the economic
intricacies and politically correct wording of proposed
guidelines. He sustained at least three major Lumbar,
two significant Cervical, and several insignificant Thoracic
disc injuries and, out of necessity, in order to remain
functional and pain-free, he developed these MANEUVERS
to put his own discs back "in." He tried numerous
MANEUVER strategies and devices, then narrowed the field
down to the options to which the reader will be exposed
upon purchase of a MEMBERSHIP.
They may not be perfect, but he tried to make them realistically
capable of being done by the majority of people without
the additional expense of complicated devices. He tried
countless other strategies and experimented with numerous
alternatives, devices, contraptions, and methods. What
you read immediately hereafter is the end product of all
that trial and error.
Now, one could say that "these might
work on him, but my back is different and unique."
Well, he covered that contingency by trying out these
MANEUVERS on too-numerous-to-count patients and acquaintances
with back pain. he boiled his instructions down to the
minimum and limited what he taught to those MANEUVERS
that led to seemingly universally successful relief of
back pain in the overwhelming majority of patients he
identified with a disc problem presumed treatable by physical
therapy. He found that, if his instructions were too complex
or patients could not understand them, they couldn't do
them; and the outcome was the same as if he had not done
anything--they didn't get better until he communicated
the most appropriate instructions to them.
The directions on how to perform the MANEUVERS
is the product of a rather extensive, truly scientific,
trial-and-error process as well. In choosing the MANEUVERS
to publish, he considered which ones were the easiest
to describe and accomplish. They may seem complex and
difficult at first; but when confined to written communications,
he has no idea whether the reader is understanding every
necessary point. So, he endeavored to be exhaustingly
wordy and repetitive in order to get the message across.
After reading and attempting a MANEUVER, a reader of average
intelligence should readily see how basically simple and
easy they are to perform as well as how effective they
are at relieving pain in most cases.
In his medical office practice, he can ideally
relate one of these same MANEUVER directions with a brief
description of the PRINCIPLES
underlying the reasoning behind the movements in as little
as twenty minutes. However, most patients require more
extensive efforts to adequately understand enough to get
themselves out of pain. Of course, this book is much more
exhaustingly detailed because it must cover every reasonably
possible contingency, stand as the substitute for actual
face-to-face education, and serve as the alternative to
a personal encounter with himself. An entire medical library
could be devoted to that equivalent. So, that being said,
one must first understand some basic, universal considerations
that pertain to all of the MANEUVERS, especially the Lumbar-type.
These MANEUVERS could not possibly hope
to help everyone with back pain , neck pain or backache;
however, he can honestly represent that they are successful
in the overwhelming majority of persons with disease of
the intervertebral discs as a source of the pain. That
covers the overwhelming majority of people with back pain.
Therefore, if repeated attempts using these MANEUVERS
over a reasonable period of time result in no relief or
increased pain and/or none of the other methodologies
described in this book are successful, then it is time
to consider the expensive imaging studies and possibly
only surgical relief as the last resort. The problem with
this statement arises when one asks what is "reasonable."
he would probably say a couple of months, by his own experience.
If a person's spine isn't very flexible, it may take that
long before the MOBILITY is achieved to sufficiently allow
migration of the disc material. For a detailed treatise
on the theoretical advantages of increased MOBILITY, go
to that named Section in the PRINCIPLES
Section..
These MANEUVERS are not always immediately
successful in all patients, quite often they are, but
he has honest, personal, as well as clinical, experience
to the contrary. However, putting the MANEUVERS into prolonged
practice in the absence of immediate relief never substantially
or permanently harmed anyone else known to the author.
Too, to his knowledge, there have been no instances of
neurological compromise or additional damage in persons
practicing this method. He found (through prolonged and
extensive follow-up interviews) his patients and he easily
tolerate the inconveniences of having to perform these
MANEUVERS because the benefit is so rewarding. Above all,
there apparently exist no other alternative, equally as
effective, self administered prospects for relief, not
withstanding the surgical options.
In the time it took to achieve personal
success, his faith in the veracity of his methods was
sometimes sorely tested; however, even then, the existence
of the probability that he could remain in perpetual pain
motivated him to persist in the face of a lack of immediate
success. Quite possibly, had he not been successful, he
suspects he would eventually have become frustrated and
decided to get an NMRI with the intent of eventually seeking
surgical remedy especially if the pain became increasingly
intense or aggravatingly unending.
At what point the reader may be caused to
consider a surgical option is as much a function of their
individual level of disease as it is
their frustration level versus the belief that eventually
they will succeed. One thing is for certain, one will
probably not succeed if they give up, and the author encourages
the reader/member to keep trying these MANEUVERS until
the last and final surgical option needs be exercised.
Even right up to the day of surgery, if it is plannned.
SELECTING
THE IDEAL MANEUVERS
In the webbook, there are numerous categories
of MANEUVERS presented. They are primarily differentiated
by the anatomical site of the pain. Then, numerous choices
are offered depending upon your particular situation at
the time of pain or convenience. There are bed-based maneuvers
which employ the use of a standard bed, pillow-based maneuvers
that work with large couch pillows or other floor-based
equipment, and assorted other methods to achieve the same
end--pain relief through self-administered physical manipulation
therapy. To make the selection easier, an image map
of the human body is provided with links to the most
appropriate maneuvers depending upon the areas of pain
involved. In order to obtain this information, one must
either
PURCHASE
A MEMBERSHIP SUBSCRIPTION
or
PURCHASE
THE BOOK.
List of Diagnoses responding to
The O'Connor Technique
| Herniated Intervertebral Disc |
Herniated Intervertebral Disk |
Spinal Pain |
| Acute Back Pain |
Chronic Back Pain |
Lumbar Ligament Strain |
| Acute Backache |
Chronic Backache |
Ligamentous Strain |
| Acute Cervical Pain |
Chronic Cervical Pain |
Mechanical Cervical Pain |
| Acute Cervical Sprain |
Chronic Cervical Sprain |
Shoulder Pain |
| Acute Low Back Pain |
Chronic Low Back Pain |
Lumbar Ligament Sprain |
| Acute Lumbar Pain |
Chronic Lumbar Pain |
Low Backache |
| Acute Mechanical Back Pain |
Chronic Mechanical Back Pain |
Lumbar Soft Tissue Injury |
| Acute Mechanical Backache |
Acute Mechanical Backache |
Recurrent Back Pain |
| Acute Neck Pain |
Chronic Neck Pain |
Mechanical Neck Pain |
| Back Sprain |
Back Strain |
Sacroiliitis |
| Cervical Disc Herniation |
Cervical Disk Herniation |
Wry Neck Syndrome |
| Cervical Disc Protrusion |
Cervical Disk Protrusion |
Whiplash Injury |
| Cervical Injury |
Cervical Trauma |
Whiplash |
| Cervical Ligament Sprain |
Cervical Ligament Strain |
Sciatica |
| Cervical Soft Tissue Injury |
Shoulder and Arm Pain |
|
| Congenital Scoliosis |
Neuromuscular Scoliosis |
Spondylosis |
| Degenerative Disc Disease |
Degenerative Disk Disease |
Fibromyalgia Syndrome |
| Disc Disease |
Disk Disease |
Muscle Sprain |
| Facet Syndrome |
Facet Arthritis |
Spinal Facet Joint Disease |
| Herniated Disc |
Herniated Disk |
Muscle Strain |
| Idiopathic Scoliosis |
Torticullis |
Spondololysis |
| Intervertebral Disc Disease |
Intervertebral Disc Disease |
Scoliosis |
| Intervertebral Disc Disorder |
Intervertebral Disk Disorder |
Pulled Back Muscle |
| Intervertebral Disc Displacement |
Intervertebral Disk Displacement |
Muscle Spasms |
| Intervertebral DiscProtrusion |
Intervertebral Disk Protrusion |
Arthritis |
| Low Back Sprain |
Low Back Strain |
Nerve Root Syndrome |
| Lumbar Disc Degeneration |
Lumbar Disk Degeneration |
Sacroilitis |
| Lumbar Disc Disease |
Lumbar Disk Disease |
Spinal Soft Tissue Injury |
| Lumbar Injury |
Lumbar Pain |
Lumbago |
| Lumbar Sprain |
Lumbar Strain |
Lumbar Radiculopathy |
| Mechanical Back Pain |
Mechanical Low Back Pain |
Radiculopathy |
| Neck Pain |
Cervical Pain |
Nonspecific Back Pain |
| Pinched Disc |
Pinched Disk |
Connective Tissue Injury |
| Slipped Disc |
Slipped Disk |
Ligamentous Sprain |
| Spinal Arthritis |
Arthritis of the Spine |
Degenerative Facet Disease |
| Spinal Disc Disease |
Spinal Disk Disease |
Fibrositis |
| Spinal Disc Protrusion |
Spinal Disk Protrusion |
Fibromyalgia |
| Spinal Disease |
Functional Back Pain |
Functional Backache |
| Spinal Misalignment |
Spinal Malalignment |
Spinal Subluxation |
| Spinal Osteoarthritis |
Osteoarthritis of the Spine |
Pulled Muscle |