Good explanation! I once had a needle plugged underskin in the back of my neck for 48 hours, it actually healed my chronic neckpain for good. But the doctor never explained to me why it worked. So I theorised that the needle was meant to create pain in that area to tell the body that some injury was there and needed to be repaired, the body would respond by sending nutrition and natural medication matters to heal that area. Your explanation just proved that I wasn't wrong about it 😃 Now I am also having a tennis elbow from playing golf, I am figuring out how to deal with it. Thanks 👍 I will try a needle.
Not certain about the points made but ,if anyone else trying to find out how do you cure tennis elbow try Freds Elbow Helper (do a search on google ) ? Ive heard some interesting things about it and my m8 got excellent results with it.
Hi Dr Brown. I had lateral epicondylitis in both elbows for over a year. After all sorts of treatment, dry needling was the only thing that fixed it for me. After about 5 sessions I felt 100% again. That being said, rather than just sticking it in the tissue and leaving the needle, the physical therapist would stick the needle in the skin and start doing an up and down motion in a trigger point (TP) while I cursed all that was holy. Eventually, the needle jabbing the TP would stop hurting and the therapist would move on to another TP.
How often can this be performed? I had dry needling done six months ago and it helped tremendously, but the pain/discomfort has come back recently (not as bad as original). Last time, my Ortho doctor recommended six weeks of rest, six weeks of easing back in, but I'm wondering if I can return sooner since this is a follow up?
From a sterilisation point of view, what is the point of alcohol-wiping the elbow, then putting marker pen ink on it, then pushing needles through the ink into the skin, effectively injecting the ink sub-dermally?
Hi Dr Brown , I am following you from Iraq. I suffer from tennis elbow in my right hand about two years ago, and I took a lot of medicine without benefit. In this year, I did a lot of physical therapy sessions with ultrasound, electrical stimulation and exercises, but without a very useful result. I hope to take your advice because in Iraq there is no treatment using needles.
Why the patients, who are in pain, laughs our loud while the Doctor is trying to fathom what's wrong....it depicts concoction and fabrication of pain...
Because she doesn't have a broken arm! Yes, it's painful - mine when I had dry needling done the other day was a 5 or 6 - but not so painful that I'm unable to laugh at a situation. Geez...
@crabhat1 agreed. My physio just started me on acupuncture (she calls it acupuncture anyway - about 5 needles in my hand, wrist, forearm and a couple in my elbow). Seems to be working great, but I’m wondering if it’s more because I’ve been resting my arm, rather than the acupuncture/needling. According to the NHS, acupuncture works for some things, just not everything it’s claimed to work for. Seems like it’s one of those instances where it works, and the traditional eastern explanations for it was just an early attempt to explain the effect (Qi energy / meridian lines, all that BS). According to the NHS though, it works because the needles agitate the nerve-endings which causes them to release endorphins which help with inflammation and pain. I saw a chiropractor once many years ago for something unrelated, recommended by a friend who sees one semi-regularly. What a load of crap. Interesting how he got my neck to crunch and stuff, but the demonstrations he did before and after were complete BS. Besides the fact that if you have to do a demonstration to show it’s effectiveness, it’s probably rubbish, but the demonstration itself was ridiculous: I went there, paid my £20 and the guy was a total con-man; before the ‘procedure’, he got me to hold my arm straight out to the side, parallel to the ground and told me not to let him push my arm back down. He placed his hand on mine and pushed it down, no problem. ”Hmm yeah, that was too easy”, he says. Then he lays me down and checks to see if my feet are parallel. After tugging at one and pushing at the other: ”Hmm yeah, that’s not right at all”, he says. Then he goes through the motions of crackin’ me bones, which wasn’t exactly ‘satisfying’, more, surprising, shocking or even ‘blood-curdling’ that my neck can be made to make those noises. Maybe mildly satisfying, but nowhere near as satisfying as cracking my own knuckles every now and then - and I wouldn’t even call that ‘satisfying’, necessarily. Afterwards is where I realised that “yep - this is total bullshit and I’ve wasted my money”: I lay down again and he checks my feet to see if they’re level. After pushing one and tugging the other, hey presto! ”Ah yes, much better!”, he says. Then I stand up and I’m told to hold my arm out, just as before, and told to resist his attempt at lowering it. ”Huurrghhh uurrghhh, uummppf”, he says. I’d emerged victorious, somehow completely able to resist this 6’2”, 220lbs guy from pushing my arm (that was held out straight to my side, with him pushing down from my hand - the very end of my arm) back down by my side. As an aside, the actual procedure he carried out on me before this test must’ve really taken it out of him, because he felt maybe ⅛ as strong as he was when he first tried (and succeeded) to push my arm down before the procedure.
This was great, thanks, I been tryin to find out about "best elbow compression sleeve for tendonitis" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Ever heard of - Eiyamilla Reputable Expediency - (Have a quick look on google cant remember the place now ) ? It is a good one off product for discovering how to end your tennis elbow problem without the headache. Ive heard some extraordinary things about it and my co-worker got amazing success with it.
Can you explain how our body can improve tendon by pumping blood to the point?? I have tennis elbow too, I got Physiotherapy but it still hurts... The doctortor offers cortisone enjection but I want to try other options before that... What do you suggest doctor? Thank you
If you have tennis Elbow you need to consider changing Racket ( a low stifness),. Lower the string tension, get softer strings and then have a real doctor do an MRI . Proper physiotherapist will properly massage to break any fibrosis in your arm. And mostly you need to improve your technique to be looser when you hit. You must learn to hit the ball with your core and not the power of your arm alone
Guy I go to uses 1 needle...moves it around until it hits the spot...and it's painful....but a good pain From pain will come pleasure. Sometimes they attached electrodes to it to send a pulse...and that moves it around even more.
I call this BS and extremely dangerous. If you have tennis Elbow, you need to rest, get treated by a proper.medical doctor, get adéquate physical therapy instead of voodoo treatment. And then work on correcting your technique
Guive Chafai tell that to the hundreds of patients that I have treated including professional athletes that have gotten better!!! Don’t be so bitter and close minded😉
@@dr.kevinbrown9251 from my understanding, looking for trigger point...and breaking up scar tissue. Uhhhhh....if massage on the surface is good, then this gets straight to the problem. Its both this AND PT. That guy.....
My Dr just put in orders for me to have this done after o.t. hasnt had enough success. And as for correcting my swing? I dont play tennis. Its a repetitive use injury not just tennis
Good explanation! I once had a needle plugged underskin in the back of my neck for 48 hours, it actually healed my chronic neckpain for good. But the doctor never explained to me why it worked. So I theorised that the needle was meant to create pain in that area to tell the body that some injury was there and needed to be repaired, the body would respond by sending nutrition and natural medication matters to heal that area. Your explanation just proved that I wasn't wrong about it 😃 Now I am also having a tennis elbow from playing golf, I am figuring out how to deal with it. Thanks 👍 I will try a needle.
Not certain about the points made but ,if anyone else trying to find out how do you cure tennis elbow try Freds Elbow Helper (do a search on google ) ? Ive heard some interesting things about it and my m8 got excellent results with it.
Hi Dr Brown. I had lateral epicondylitis in both elbows for over a year. After all sorts of treatment, dry needling was the only thing that fixed it for me. After about 5 sessions I felt 100% again. That being said, rather than just sticking it in the tissue and leaving the needle, the physical therapist would stick the needle in the skin and start doing an up and down motion in a trigger point (TP) while I cursed all that was holy. Eventually, the needle jabbing the TP would stop hurting and the therapist would move on to another TP.
Kyle Haugstad that is awesome. Glad it helped!!! Whatever technique she used was effective so that’s the main thing!!!!
How often can this be performed? I had dry needling done six months ago and it helped tremendously, but the pain/discomfort has come back recently (not as bad as original). Last time, my Ortho doctor recommended six weeks of rest, six weeks of easing back in, but I'm wondering if I can return sooner since this is a follow up?
From a sterilisation point of view, what is the point of alcohol-wiping the elbow, then putting marker pen ink on it, then pushing needles through the ink into the skin, effectively injecting the ink sub-dermally?
He’s a chiropractor bro. What would you expect.
@@Jimmy-Legs I see what you're saying: he doesn't know shit about medical realities....
back in 2 years to leave a single comment. typical internet jerks.
@@huntshowman8202 I know, right? Tossers. Whereas huntshowman8202 is somehow a prince amongst men.
I’m on a waiting list for this treatment... I’m a bit nervous now after watching this 😂
It’s like he’s pushing those needles deeper every time
Did her tennis elbow go away?
Hi Dr Brown , I am following you from Iraq. I suffer from tennis elbow in my right hand about two years ago, and I took a lot of medicine without benefit. In this year, I did a lot of physical therapy sessions with ultrasound, electrical stimulation and exercises, but without a very useful result. I hope to take your advice because in Iraq there is no treatment using needles.
شلون صرت
what training do you have for dry needling?
After watching the video I'd suggest he bought himself a "have a go at home" kit....... That was frightening
@@dazzmiller7343 lol, its why Ive never used chiropractors
yout gun is'it ultrasound atau stimolator elektrik..?
Which is the machine you used at the end?
It looks like a shockwave
Why the patients, who are in pain, laughs our loud while the Doctor is trying to fathom what's wrong....it depicts concoction and fabrication of pain...
People sometimes laugh when they are nervous
Because she doesn't have a broken arm! Yes, it's painful - mine when I had dry needling done the other day was a 5 or 6 - but not so painful that I'm unable to laugh at a situation. Geez...
Two minutes into this video and this dude is not very gentle. She looked like she wanted to slap him when he picked up her arm the first time.
What is the point of wearing gloves if you’re gonna finger everything in the office including your pants, pillows and diagrams on the wall?
I had this done yesterday and I fainted :(
Why? Did it hurt? I want this done.
Is this similar to acupuncture?
no
@@NofirstnameNolastname :O
@crabhat1 Which is ironic, considering it’s a _Chiropractor_ demonstrating it…
Yes, this is what acupuncture is (the modern use of it - nothing to do with Qi energy or any of that crap).
@crabhat1 agreed. My physio just started me on acupuncture (she calls it acupuncture anyway - about 5 needles in my hand, wrist, forearm and a couple in my elbow). Seems to be working great, but I’m wondering if it’s more because I’ve been resting my arm, rather than the acupuncture/needling. According to the NHS, acupuncture works for some things, just not everything it’s claimed to work for.
Seems like it’s one of those instances where it works, and the traditional eastern explanations for it was just an early attempt to explain the effect (Qi energy / meridian lines, all that BS).
According to the NHS though, it works because the needles agitate the nerve-endings which causes them to release endorphins which help with inflammation and pain.
I saw a chiropractor once many years ago for something unrelated, recommended by a friend who sees one semi-regularly. What a load of crap. Interesting how he got my neck to crunch and stuff, but the demonstrations he did before and after were complete BS. Besides the fact that if you have to do a demonstration to show it’s effectiveness, it’s probably rubbish, but the demonstration itself was ridiculous:
I went there, paid my £20 and the guy was a total con-man; before the ‘procedure’, he got me to hold my arm straight out to the side, parallel to the ground and told me not to let him push my arm back down. He placed his hand on mine and pushed it down, no problem.
”Hmm yeah, that was too easy”, he says.
Then he lays me down and checks to see if my feet are parallel. After tugging at one and pushing at the other:
”Hmm yeah, that’s not right at all”, he says.
Then he goes through the motions of crackin’ me bones, which wasn’t exactly ‘satisfying’, more, surprising, shocking or even ‘blood-curdling’ that my neck can be made to make those noises. Maybe mildly satisfying, but nowhere near as satisfying as cracking my own knuckles every now and then - and I wouldn’t even call that ‘satisfying’, necessarily.
Afterwards is where I realised that “yep - this is total bullshit and I’ve wasted my money”:
I lay down again and he checks my feet to see if they’re level. After pushing one and tugging the other, hey presto!
”Ah yes, much better!”, he says.
Then I stand up and I’m told to hold my arm out, just as before, and told to resist his attempt at lowering it.
”Huurrghhh uurrghhh, uummppf”, he says.
I’d emerged victorious, somehow completely able to resist this 6’2”, 220lbs guy from pushing my arm (that was held out straight to my side, with him pushing down from my hand - the very end of my arm) back down by my side.
As an aside, the actual procedure he carried out on me before this test must’ve really taken it out of him, because he felt maybe ⅛ as strong as he was when he first tried (and succeeded) to push my arm down before the procedure.
Hi sir l am vijay ,I was 1 problem that mean tmj problem i swallow food my tmj is clicking so irritated what i will ? Plz help sir
This was great, thanks, I been tryin to find out about "best elbow compression sleeve for tendonitis" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Ever heard of - Eiyamilla Reputable Expediency - (Have a quick look on google cant remember the place now ) ? It is a good one off product for discovering how to end your tennis elbow problem without the headache. Ive heard some extraordinary things about it and my co-worker got amazing success with it.
Can you explain how our body can improve tendon by pumping blood to the point??
I have tennis elbow too, I got Physiotherapy but it still hurts... The doctortor offers cortisone enjection but I want to try other options before that... What do you suggest doctor?
Thank you
If you have tennis Elbow you need to consider changing Racket ( a low stifness),. Lower the string tension, get softer strings and then have a real doctor do an MRI . Proper physiotherapist will properly massage to break any fibrosis in your arm. And mostly you need to improve your technique to be looser when you hit.
You must learn to hit the ball with your core and not the power of your arm alone
Basically this is westernized acupuncture. You are not inserting at any acupoints and you are using way too many needles. FRANKENPUNCTURE.
It is dry needling
Guy I go to uses 1 needle...moves it around until it hits the spot...and it's painful....but a good pain
From pain will come pleasure.
Sometimes they attached electrodes to it to send a pulse...and that moves it around even more.
I call this BS and extremely dangerous. If you have tennis Elbow, you need to rest, get treated by a proper.medical doctor, get adéquate physical therapy instead of voodoo treatment. And then work on correcting your technique
Guive Chafai tell that to the hundreds of patients that I have treated including professional athletes that have gotten better!!! Don’t be so bitter and close minded😉
Shut the fuck up boy scout
@@dr.kevinbrown9251 from my understanding, looking for trigger point...and breaking up scar tissue.
Uhhhhh....if massage on the surface is good, then this gets straight to the problem.
Its both this AND PT.
That guy.....
My Dr just put in orders for me to have this done after o.t. hasnt had enough success. And as for correcting my swing? I dont play tennis. Its a repetitive use injury not just tennis
I’ve tried all that. Nothing has worked. Slight improvement. I want TE healed. I’m trying this dry needle therapy next.