Specialties: Physiatry


Foot & Ankle Care
Hand & Upper Extremity
Joint Replacement
Orthopedic Trauma
Pediatric Orthopedics
Physiatry
Spine Surgery
Acupuncture
Physical Therapy
Outpatient Surgery
Diagnostic Services


 
  As the majority of back and neck problems resolve over time, the cornerstone of the Comprehensive Spine Center at DOC is conservative care. Physiatrists -- board certified in physical medicine & rehabilitation -- offer a team approach to wellness, working with other physicians and specialists to deliver personalized treatment plans. Often a program including pain medications, injections and physical therapy is enough to reduce or eliminate back or neck pain without surgical intervention.

Physiatry Defined

The term Physiatry derives from the Greek words physikos (physical) and iatreia (art of healing). A physiatrist is a physician who creatively employs physical agents as well as other medical therapeutics to help in the healing and rehabilitation of a patient. Treatment involves the whole person and addresses the physical, emotional and social needs that must be satisfied to successfully restore the patient’s quality of life to its maximum potential.

Since the beginning of time, people have used physical means for treatment of illness and injury. Such physical agents for healing have included water, heat, cold, massage, light, exercise and electricity. Throughout history, water has functioned as a primary means of physical healing. Written accounts of physical techniques for healing can be traced as far back as the writings of Hippocrates in 400 B.C.

In the 1930s the field of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PM&R) began to address musculoskeletal and neurological problems but broadened its scope considerably after World War II. As thousands of veterans came back to the United States with serious disabilities, the task of helping to restore them to productive lives became a new direction for the field. The Advisory Board of Medical Specialties granted PM&R its approval as a specialty of medicine in 1947.

Injuries Physiatrists treat range from sore shoulders to spinal cord injuries, acute and chronic pain, and musculoskeletal disorders, with the focus on restoring function to the patient. Patients may be a person who lifts a heavy object at work and experiences back pain, a basketball player who sprains an ankle and needs rehabilitation to play again, or a knitter who has carpal tunnel syndrome. Physiatrists’ patients also include people with arthritis, tendonitis, any kind of back pain, and work and sports-related injuries.

Physiatrists treat very serious disorders of the musculoskeletal system that result in severe functional limitations as well. They would treat a baby with a birth defect, someone in a bad car accident, or an elderly person with a broken hip. Physiatrists also treat people with spinal cord injuries, strokes, amputations, cancer and multiple sclerosis. All require a long-term rehabilitation process.

Since it is the concern of Physiatrists to restore patients to maximum function, the difference they make can be dramatic. In the case of the Herniated disc, the physiatrist not only takes care of the acute problem, but also treats the patient until he returns to optimal functioning, usually without surgery. The physiatrist also teaches the patient how to prevent the injury in the future.

Another example is that of a broken hip in the elderly. Physiatrists can provide aggressive rehabilitation so patients can walk and even exercise again. And because the physiatrist is concerned with all areas of rehabilitation – social, vocational, and medical – the quality of life is significantly increased for patients.

(Reprinted in part with permission of the American Academy of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation.)



Copyright © 2003-2006, Desert Orthopedic Center • (760) 568-2684
Site Design by Swarm Orthopedic