Electrical Muscle Stimulator
When I was a teenager I used to tease my mother about getting older as she developed some joint stiffness in her knees and lower back. For my mother this would usually occur with over exertion and would go away with rest. Through my twenties I experienced minor lower back pain on and off after different activities. This was attributed to a fall I took while ice skating when I was fourteen. I had landed hard on my tailbone and had required some ultra sound treatments. By the time I was thirty there were times when I could hardly walk due to the pain in my lower back. After many different doctor visits and referrals to specialists I was diagnosed with a form of arthritis that affects the spine and sacroiliac joints. There are a number of other symptoms such as swelling of the hands and feet as well as headaches.
As part of my treatment, I was placed on different medications and involved with focused physical therapy to alleviate pain and keep my joints moving and healthy. If the pain was too much at home, a therapist was only a phone call away. They used different methods to help me cope including massage therapy, ice packs, hot packs, ultra sound technology, and other methods including an electrical muscle stimulator. All these different therapies did provide enough relief for me to go home.
One winter, the pain was so bad, my physical therapist suggested an electrical muscle stimulator to try. He instructed my husband on how to use it and where to place it on my back. The device is used to increase blood flow to the muscles in the area and relieve pain.
This device is also used in victims of spinal cord injuries to help with muscles that are not longer being used to keep them from atrophying there is a regulator on the unit that allows the wearer to increase or decrease the stimulation. When I was wearing the electrical muscle stimulator I would feel slight tingles that would be going to the muscles. When I would go into muscle spasms I would turn on the stimulator to increase the blood flow to the area. This would help to disrupt the spasm and decrease my pain. The device is small enough to place in a pocket and the electrodes are flat so they do not show under clothing. It is a nice alternative for me at work so that I do not have to take pain killers which often make me too tired to perform my job duties.
As always, consult your doctor before beginning any treatment for injuries



























