Sean - There is perhaps one hopeful inroad to your problem. It is rare for a spinal lesion to be located at only the one segment. Usually subsequent compensations arise at other vertebrae well away from the actual lesion. Certainly after surgery such as yours.
My advice is phone around the area chiropractors and osteopaths, and make an appointment to visit the most expensive, in the desperate hope that cost may denote greater skill. But this is not always the case, of course. You want him to IGNORE the surgically altered area but to carefully check and balance the rest of the spine and feet. The hope is that by bringing the rest of the spinal leverage into as harmonious a state as possible, some relief may be obtained. That is how I myself would handle your problem. But the surgically altered area must be left alone. It may even help to cross your fingers and maybe your eyes! JOKE. John Roberts-James http://www.spinalcorrectivetherapy.co.uk/ http://www.alternativetherapyclinic.co.uk http://www.johnroberts-james.co.uk/ http://www.sjambok.co.uk http://www.effectiveselfdefence.co.uk http://www.personalprotectionpublications.co.uk/pub10.htm http://www.personalprotectionpublications.co.uk http://www.musicsolo.com _______________________________________________ post: [email protected] unsubscribe or set options at https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org
