Numbness & Tingling
Many people experience numbness or a lack of sensation at some point in their life. It may be an “arm going to sleep” or a “pins and needles” sensation.
About Numbness & Tingling
Numbness and tingling occurs when a sensory nerve becomes impinged, leading to a decrease in input from that nerve to the brain. The impingement must be removed for normal sensation to return. If the impingement has been longstanding or severe it can cut, tear or damage the nerve which leads to ongoing or even permanent numbness. A peripheral sensory nerve (one that supplies the periphery of the body, i.e. not part of the brain or spinal cord) will go through a repair process when the insult is removed. This process is slow at first (about 4 mm/day).
The Anatomy
The spine is one of the most common places for an irritated nerve to occur due to subluxation or a herniated disc. One can experience numbness in the shoulder, arm, or fingers (commonly diagnosed as carpal tunnel syndrome) because of nerve pressure in the cervical spine, or the ribcage or middle back due to the thoracic spine, or in the buttock, leg or foot due to the lumbar spine. It is important to note that one can have numbness originating from the spine but not have spinal pain because some fibers perceive pain (nociceptors) while others perceive sensation (mechanoreceptors). One can have mechanoreceptor irritation without nociceptor irritation and vise versa.
Chiropractic & Numbness/Tingling
The chief concern of chiropractors is to remove nerve interference. We use specific means to remove nerve irritation without invasive drugs, shots, or surgery. Several studies show the benefits of chiropractic care for nerve irritation and numbness. One such study revealed 90% of sciatic patients (sciatic nerve irritation from the lumbar spine, causing pain and/or numbness) experienced relief, while another showed patients experiencing a 50% reduction in sciatic symptoms within 16 days of care. Specific spinal adjustments help to normalize spinal reflexes, which are a means for the body to relay messages from the body to the spinal cord and vise versa.
Sources & References
- Lantz, Charles A., “Implications concerning the fixation hypothesis of chiropractic subluxations,” Chiropractic Research Journal. Vol. 1 No.1, Spring, 1988.
- J Manipulative Physiol Ther 1995; 18:335-42.
- J Manipulative Physiol Ther 1983; 6:117-28.
- Gatterman, meridel I., Foundations of Chiropractic Subluxation. Mosby, 1995.
Reduce Symptoms and Find Relief
Studies show that chiropractic can help decrease the presence of numbness or tingling sensations. Book an appointment with Prather Chiropractic today.