Quote Originally Posted by ginger View Post
"shin splints " hey, yeah sure. referred pain from L3/4 more likely. What is it that keeps you allowing repeats of methods that don't work , five series of treatments to your legs with no results, you must get very frustrated. I can't give you the name of the physio who will fix your referred pain problem . I would feel like I had ignored your pleas for help however if I allowed you to continue to get inappropriate treatments for a simple low back nerve irritation and went on to have , god forbid , surgery. That would merely add further insullt to your compounded woes.
Find a physio who is willing and able to mobilise L3 and L4 in your low back . The best method is known as Continuous Mobilisation. Applied with skill and persistance , passive movements to these facet joints will release protective responses there that have lead to an inflammatory event (s) of nerve roots . It is the effects then of altered nerve physiology that has created an altered sensation picture which is interpreted as pain . It is common in these cases to also have local redness and perhaps swelling to the painfull region . This presents a quandary for the young players or inexperienced therapist . Untill or unless your lower lumbar spine has been returned to an unprotected mobile state , your medial leg referred pain will persist.
Either find a more experienced physio who will treat your back or convince your current therapist not to follow the course that has been thoroughly and convincingly demonstrated to be ineffective and incorrect.
Cheers
I am a PT patient. I have been diagnosed with MTSS/ Periostitis/Shin splints. I have been non responsive to any therapies for 1 and 1/2 years. I have a very involved history, but in summary, I started with bilateral calf pain in March '06. Calf pain mostly resolved, but medial shin pain persists. I had an ultrasound on Tuesday, September 4. The tech showed me my tibia where it lines up with healthy tissue around my knee. As she moved the wand south, the area surrounding the tibia all turned black, because there was no signal response. The tissue had all seperated from the tibia. She said she had never seen periostits this bad. She went and summoned the Dr. who gave me the number for a surgeon.

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