Do you really think a chiropractor is smart enough to even know or care what a psoas muscle is? Chiropractors just "crack" necks and backs no matter what you go to them for. See a massage therapist, forget the quacks. I sent my cousin, who had been suffering for years with low back pain, to my LMT. The therapist helped more in two treatments, than two years of going to a chiropractor. Just ridiculous
why would they want to waste their time with such ignorant nonsense? they're not interested in uselessly playing with effects, like massage therapists, medical doctors,etc.. they have an infinitely superior approach-it's called correcting the cause, which happens to be nerve interference. it restores normal function in most cases instantly. however, it is not the purpose of chiropractic to "treat" any particular effect of nerve interference, like a psoas problem, but to liberate the body from it and let it restore itself. most, like the massage therapist, are too ignorant to understand that the health significance of a neurogenically weak psoas, or any other skeletal muscle, goes far beyond just the muscle itself, and that failing to correct the cause will result in, at best, repeated recurrences, but then, what do you expect for someone who isn't a doctor of chiropractic and just rubs backs ?
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Yes. So can properly trained physical and massage therapists.
Do you really think a chiropractor is smart enough to even know or care what a psoas muscle is? Chiropractors just "crack" necks and backs no matter what you go to them for. See a massage therapist, forget the quacks. I sent my cousin, who had been suffering for years with low back pain, to my LMT. The therapist helped more in two treatments, than two years of going to a chiropractor. Just ridiculous
why would they want to waste their time with such ignorant nonsense? they're not interested in uselessly playing with effects, like massage therapists, medical doctors,etc.. they have an infinitely superior approach-it's called correcting the cause, which happens to be nerve interference. it restores normal function in most cases instantly. however, it is not the purpose of chiropractic to "treat" any particular effect of nerve interference, like a psoas problem, but to liberate the body from it and let it restore itself. most, like the massage therapist, are too ignorant to understand that the health significance of a neurogenically weak psoas, or any other skeletal muscle, goes far beyond just the muscle itself, and that failing to correct the cause will result in, at best, repeated recurrences, but then, what do you expect for someone who isn't a doctor of chiropractic and just rubs backs ?