Let's face it, there's a lot of confusing and even misleading information out there.Effective information to help your neuropathy can be hard to find because you are different than anyone else. Your neuropathy has a different combination of causes..Another possible reason for confusion is the outdated or misleading medical research data. This comes from "best guesses" from both neuropathy sufferers and medical practitioners being reproduced as facts, and just plain old rumors.These all contribute to a lot of very basic misinformation about neuropathy.
Myth #1: Neuropathy is only a diabetic disease.
Not true. While neuropathy is common in diabetic patients and is popularly associated with diabetes, neuropathy affects chemotherapy recipients, those suffering from injuries or illness, even sufferers of common ailments such as carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS), herniated discs and spinal joint disorders, the kind of problems a Bryan College Station Aggieland Chiropractor can properly evaluate.
If you feel pain, numbness, or other nerve symptoms, even if you're not diabetic, neuropathy could be the cause.
Myth #2: Neuropathy is the natural result of aging.
False. Older people have more neuropathy, but it affects people of all ages.Just because you're getting older doesn't mean neuropathy is a fact of life.
Peripheral neuropathy can be caused by injuries, complications with medication, or metabolic issues (among dozens of other causes). Taking the right steps early can keep you from suffering many neuropathic symptoms as you get older.
Myth #3: All neuropathy feels the same.
False. Neuropathy can show up as tingling, creepy crawly sensations, sharp pains, numbness, loss of balance, and even significant muscle weakness. An unhappy nerve can't communicate as well to the brain, and the brain misinterprets the signals as all kinds of different symptoms.
That's why taking pills to mask the symptoms fails to treat the cause.
Myth #4: My doc says there's no cure, so I just have to live with it.
True, but only if you make no effort to find and fix the causes of your neuropathy. You may have nerve damage and neuropathic pain, and you might have to live with some adjustments to your lifestyle and maybe feel some residual discomfort.
Your Aggieland chiropractic doctor in College Station Bryan can see that taking action now means there's a good chance that you can keep your symptoms from getting worse and, maybe see a significant reversal of your symptoms.
Myth #5: My neuropathy is well controlled by medications, so I'm doing just fine.
The danger here is that you could silently be getting worse and not even know it until it's too late. Medicating the symptoms is like taking the battery out of your smoke alarm to stop the noise.
Your pain may be gone, but the meds may be hiding a gradual loss of nerve function and you could be losing your ability to maintain good balance and walk without falling. Then one day, without warning, you can fall and break your arm or hip.
Remember, if your neuropathy is not getting better, it's probably getting worse.
Neuropathy is a thief. It steals precious moments of your life that you can never get back.
Why waste time living on pain medications and struggling to get through the day?
Why wait until your neuropathy gets even worse?