Many patients that would have had to endure surgery have opted for  Non-Surgical Spinal Decompression from

The DRX9000®

The Worlds Most Advanced Non-Surgical Treatment for Back and Neck Pain

 

Today, you don’t have to live with that pain anymore. Thanks to the concerted efforts of a team of top physicians and medical engineers, Spinal Decompression was developed to effectively treat lower back pain and sciatica resulting from herniated or deteriorated discs. Spinal Decompression not only significantly reduces back pain in many patients, but also enables the majority of patients to return to more active lifestyles.

Spinal Decompression

Spinal decompression is a non-invasive mechanical procedure  to help alleviate herniated Disc problems in the Neck and Low Back .  It involves gently stretching the spine to take pressure off the spinal discs (the cushions that separate the vertebrae in the spine). By relieving this pressure, bulging discs can retract back into place which takes pressure off the nerves in the spine. By decompressing the spine, it permits water, oxygen and other fluids to work their way back into the discs allowing them to heal naturally. Spinal decompression is an excellent option for anyone with chronic neck and back disc pain who wants to get back to living a pain-free life as quickly as possible.

Does Spinal Decompression really work?

Spinal Decompression has been proven effective in relieving the pain associated with bulging and herniated discs, degenerative disc disease, sciatica, and even relapse or failed back surgery. Since its release, clinical studies have revealed an amazing success rate in treating lumbar disc related problems with Spinal Decompression.

How does it work?

Spinal Decompression uses state of the art technology to apply a distraction force to relieve nerve compression often associated with low back pain and sciatica.

Contact our office today to schedule an initial consultation with our Doctor to determine if you are a candidate for care with Spinal Decompression. After carefully studying your case history and exam findings, he will sit down and explain his recommended plan of action for you. After answering any questions you may have about the recommended plan, you may begin your care with Spinal Decompression.

 

request an appointment

 

[/dm-half][/dm-section]

What is the DRX 9000?

The DRX 9000 is a sophisticated spinal decompression device meticulously designed to offer non-surgical relief from debilitating back pain. It represents a significant advancement in medical technology, providing a novel solution for conditions such as herniated discs, sciatica, and chronic lower back pain. The DRX 9000 is specifically engineered to deliver precise, controlled spinal decompression, targeting affected spinal segments with remarkable accuracy.

request an appointment
[/dm-half]
[/dm-section]

The Science Behind the DRX 9000

The effectiveness of the DRX 9000 lies in its scientific approach to spinal decompression. During treatment, the patient is comfortably positioned on a motorized table, with a harness securely fitted around the hips. The device then methodically stretches the spine, creating a negative intradiscal pressure. This negative pressure promotes the retraction of herniated or bulging disc material, thereby alleviating pain. It also encourages the influx of vital nutrients and oxygen back into the disc, fostering an optimal healing environment.

request an appointment

In-Depth Benefits of the DRX 9000

  • Non-Invasive Approach: The DRX 9000 offers a compelling alternative to surgical interventions, making it an attractive option for those seeking non-invasive treatments.
  • Precision Targeting: Its ability to precisely target specific spinal segments ensures focused and effective treatment, addressing the root cause of pain.
  • Significant Pain Reduction: Numerous patients report substantial decreases in back pain, with many achieving lasting relief.
  • Enhanced Mobility: By reducing pressure on spinal nerves, the DRX 9000 significantly improves mobility and overall quality of life.
  • Safety and Comfort: The treatment is known for its high safety profile and patient comfort, making it suitable for a wide demographic.

About Us

Excite Medical is a medical device company based in Tampa, Florida, USA. Excite Medical, registered with the U.S. FDA, holds four FDA 510(k)s including one for the DRX9000®.

The DRX9000® has been cleared by the FDA to treat patients suffering with incapacitating lower back pain and sciatica caused by herniated discs, degenerative discs, and posterior facet syndrome.

Become one of over 1 million fans to follow our DRX9000® Facebook page at Facebook.com DRX9000® and subscribe to our YouTube channel, currently DRX9000® related videos have well over one million views combined, at YouTube.com/c/DRX9000 by ExciteMedical. For media inquiries please fill out the Contact Us form.

FDA # : 3008816697

 

 Author: Dr. Eric Kaplan, DC   (The American Chiropractor  FEBRUARY 2021)

. Why nonsurgical spinal decompression (NSSD) versus surgery?

Just look at the statistics.

For those not aware, spine surgeons are typically initially trained as orthopedic surgeons or neurosurgeons and are capable of doing many great things.

They repair traumatic injuries; they excise spinal tumors; and they fix congenital abnormalities.

However, back pain is big business today. Why is this happening?

Let’s face the fact that, except for top-tier physicians who work and teach at hospitals and medical schools, such procedures are not the mainstay of the general population of spine surgeons.

About 60% of patients who walk into a spine surgeon’s clinic have back pain that will be diagnosed as “ordinary,” “axial,” “mechanical,” “degenerative,” “functional,” or “nonspecific.”

Those terms describe flattened discs, black discs, bulging discs, herniated discs (described as “prolapsed discs” in the United Kingdom), and the bony outgrowths known as osteophytes.

It is too common for surgeons to point to these ordinary degenerative conditions on an MRI, diagnose “degenerative disc disease,” and recommend lumbar spinal fusion surgery as the best choice.

Studies show a low efficacy rate and high costs associated with what many medical doctors are now saying is an unnecessary procedure.

There’s a problem with this very common procedure, in which the intervertebral disc is excised, and adjacent vertebrae are connected with cages, screws, plates, rods, and other medical devices.

Studies show that lumbar fusion succeeds in barely 40% of patients. In this context, the word “success” does not mean much.

In one study, two years after spinal fusion, pain had barely been reduced by half after “successful” procedures, and most patients continued to use painkillers.

In another study, two years after surgery, about one-third of patients reported that their pain was as bad as it had been before they’d had the operation, and 14% believed that they were in worse shape after spinal fusion.

Some surgeons have stated, “Eighty to 85% of the time, although they can visualize an anomaly on the X-ray or MRI, they cannot, with any certainty, determine the source of the pain.” That’s why

10 spine surgeons will propose 10 different solutions; one may recommend fusing the spine at three levels, while another sees no indication for any type of procedure. The ambiguity inherent in

diagnosing back pain makes it possible for surgeons to do anything they want. However, they do not want to go under the knife themselves.

Richard Deyo reports, “Chronic back pain is among the most common patient complaints. Its prevalence and impact have spawned a rapidly expanding range of tests and treatments. Some of these have become widely used for indications that are not well validated, leading to uncertainty about efficacy and safety, increasing complication rates, and marketing abuses. Recent studies document—over approximately a decade—a 629% increase in Medicare expenditures for epidural steroid injections; a 423% increase in expenditures for opioids for back pain; a 307% increase in the number of lumbar MRIs among Medicare beneficiaries; and a 220% increase in spinal fusion surgery rates.

At an American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons conference in the summer of 2010, a hundred surgeons were  polled as to whether they’d personally have lumbar spinal fusion surgery for

unspecific low back pain. The answer—from all but one—was “absolutely not.” Why did they vote against surgery? The answer is simple; often, the risk-reward ratio just wasn’t good enough. So, I

ask, why do surgeons continue to pursue this type of operation if the success rate is often below 50%?

Mayo Clinic. They are educated, approach patients scientifically, and explain the hazards of failed back surgery The American syndrome and the consequences of epidurals and other injections.

Today’s patient needs to be educated, and it is our goal to educate them on the safety and efficacy of nonsurgical spinal decompression. Journal of Medicine observed that about 80,000 spine

surgeries fail annually in the United States alone, which is an alarming number According to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center researcher Hyun Bae, “They have their own inherent conflict.” The

prominent orthopedic surgeon further explained, “It’s not only a financial conflict. It’s an emotional conflict. We get paid to do the work. We want to make the patient better. So we concentrate on

the good results, and we dismiss the bad results.” Bae added that surgeons cannot be held entirely responsible because they are under constant pressure from patients who beg them to “do

something.” Under the circumstances, it’s hard not to want to be a hero, but too often, even if the procedure goes well, recovery stalls within weeks. The American Journal of Medicine observed

that about 80,000 spine surgeries fail annually in the United States alone, which is an alarming number.

Back surgery is growing in record numbers in our country. Patients who have not done well are referred to as “failed backs,” and they often return to the operating room repeatedly, losing ground

after each procedure.

About one in five patients who undergo spinal surgery for a degenerative disorder returns for a revision procedure—a second operation.

Even when the fusion is deemed to be “radiologically perfect”—meaning that an X-ray shows the vertebrae have grown together and the hardware is positioned correctly—the fusion itself imposes

increased stress at other vertebral segments. That often results in “adjacent segment deterioration,” a condition where the vertebral level above or below degrades, causing more pain. A second

back surgery has a 30% chance of  success. That prognosis drops to 15% for a third back surgery, and 5% for a fourth. Oregon Health and Science University spine medicine researcher Roger Chou

believes that surgeons should be required to reveal the odds to their patients before going forward. “If [the surgeon] said, ‘Yes, we can do this $70,000 surgery, but you know, there’s still more

than a 50% chance that you’re going to have a lot of pain, and you still won’t be able to work, and you’re going to need pain medicine, and you’ll have complications related to the surgery’—and all

this is well documented—then most  people would say, ‘I don’t want it.’” My son, Dr. Jason Kaplan, states approximately 30% of his patients have had surgery. In an article in a medical trade

journal, orthopedic surgeon Terry Amaral made note of some things that can go wrong that are rarely mentioned to surgical candidates. “The spinal cord is right next to where we are putting the

screws in; we are working near where the nerve roots exit,” he observed. “If you perforate that area, the patient will experience weakness or even paralysis. Then in the front of the spine, there are

other things to be concerned about, like the aorta, the vena cava, the lungs.” Other risks go unspecified. The spinal screws are misplaced in 5 to 10% of all fusion procedures. After spinal fusion,

infection is common. Nerves may be jostled and inflamed, resulting in dull, diffuse, aching.   Then there’s nonsurgical spinal decompression and chiropractic care, which research and experience

show are the safest, most effective options for most cases of back pain. Unfortunately, too many people end up in a medical or sharp stinging pain in the legs that may or may not ever go away.

Supportive spinal ligaments and muscles disturbed during the surgery rarely work with the same efficiency, and that incompetence may result in more back pain. Despite risks and mediocre

outcomes, the number of spinal fusions performed in the United States grew from 61,000 in 1993 to more than 465,000 in 2011—more than a 600% increase, accounting for more than 60% of the

spinal fusion surgery performed worldwide. It’s the most expensive form of elective surgery in the United States, costing about $40 billion annually. For 20 years, the Dartmouth Atlas of Health

Care has documented variations in how medical resources are allocated in the United States. In 2011, the university’s Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, which produces the atlas,

reported a puzzling finding: The prevalence of spine surgery in Casper, Wyoming, was nearly six times higher than it was in the Bronx, New York. Even more baffling, the rate in St. Cloud,

Minnesota, was twice that of Rochester, Minnesota, the home of the Mayo Clinic, only 150 miles away. Renowned orthopedic surgeon Dr. Timothy Kremchek had back surgery and talks about how

he regrets it. He says he’d recommend nonsurgical spinal decompression before an injection or epidural because there is no downside. The fact remains that surgery is big business that is often

governed by greed. Although there are exceptions, most European and UK surgeons avoid the procedure, while US surgeons are quick to operate and fuse the spine. Oxford University Hospital’s

orthopedic surgeon Jeremy Fairbank stated, “I end up sending most of my patients with chronic pain to rehabilitation programs and, therefore, end up fusing a tiny number of highly motivated

patients. If you have a spinal fusion operation, you are off work for four to eight weeks and sometimes longer. A rehab program takes one to three weeks.” Lumbar spinal fusion is an operation

with a bad reputation. So what do we do? We change the paradigm. Let’s face the facts. It is estimated that there is an 80% chance that every American will suffer back pain during their lifetime.

Often governed by insurance companies, they go to their primary care provider. Their medical doctor will likely recommend over-the-counter pain medication or prescription medication to relieve

the pain temporarily. Depending on the doctor’s assessment and how he or she feels, the patient will respond, and the doctor may even consider the patient a candidate for an epidural or spine

surgery. We now know this can often be a poor option.

doctor’s office instead of a chiropractor’s office, which accounts for the rampant use of medications and surgery for back pain, particularly in the US.

That’s why back surgery, and medical management of back pain in general, is too frequent, too costly, and too ineffective, and why chiropractic care should be the first option when dealing with

back pain.  We reduce costs by reducing unnecessary surgeries.

Dr. Eric S. Kaplan, is President of DISC Centers of America &  CEO of Concierge Coaches,  training Spinal Decompression nationwide. He has worked with two Presidents of the United States and two U.S. Surgeon Generals.