If you have ever read any of my previous blog posts or have seen some of the other articles I have written, you undoubtedly know where I stand on the chronic use of medications to deal with back pain. The fact is that medication use for back pain is unproven and it’s not substantiated by the medical literature. Not only that but, in many cases the intended use for the medication prescribed is not for back pain. A new and very dangerous player in the medication approach to back pain is the use of opioids, a very dangerous and highly addictive drug class.

Several recent reports have shown that the use of opioids for back pain has led to a serious increase in the number of injuries and deaths. The benefits of opiods in the long-term treatment of chronic back pain haven’t been documented, but the risks related to this treatment approach are painfully apparent.

In fact the National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC) recently issued a publication showing that “the number of deaths and treatment admissions involving controlled prescription drugs, particularly prescription opiods, has increased significantly. This problem is becoming so wide spread that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has reported that the #1 cause of death in middle-aged adults is no longer auto accidents, but is now drug poisoning. During 2005-2006, 92% of poisoning deaths involved drugs!

This is all very shocking to say the least…things have to change, and my hope is that many of you will find relief from your back pain without the use of drugs. Non-surgical treatments like spinal decompression really work. This treatment approach provides a long lasting benefit by addressing the cause, not clouding your brain so you don’t realize how bad you are. So the next time you reach for that pill bottle, do yourself a favor and call my office instead.



It’s obvious that smoking is bad for you, in spite of what some of the tobacco companies may have said in the past. And as a doctor, I feel it is my duty to at least mention the known effects of smoking to my patients that do so, to at least attempt to sway them a little. Everyone that I know that smokes, wishes they could quit, but they just can’t ever seem to pull it off.

As a back pain doctor I am always asked whether or not I believe smoking affects the spine, does it cause an increased likelihood of back pain? The short answer to that is yes, I do. But, medical studies on the subject just never could quite pin smoking down as a potential cause. It makes sense when you think of the physiology of the disc, the fact that it lacks a blood supply and relies on fluid exchange from the blood supply to the bones above and below. You would logically think that a lack of oxygen in the system would affect the tissues without a blood supply first, right?

Well, a Finnish study recently published in the American Journal of Medicine has come to the conclusion that smoking is “modestly” associated with the risk of low back pain and the effects may be “at least partly reversible.” The Finnish researchers identified and reviewed 81 studies from around the world involving smokers, former smokers, or never-smokers and low back pain conducted between 1966 and 2009. Of those, 40 studies involving more than 300,000 adults and adolescents met the standards for the analysis.

They found that “Current smokers (adolescents or adults) are at only 31% higher risk of low back pain compared with never smokers but this estimate is only for low back pain for one day or more during the past 12 months,”

The research does suggest “the effects of smoking may be at least partially reversible,” since former smokers were less likely to seek care for low back pain than current smokers. However, more research into former smokers will be needed to make a more definitive claim.

So there you have it, at least some evidence of a cause and effect relationship between smoking and lower back pain. I know it isn’t ground breaking research, but it’s all I have.



Two randomized controlled trials on vertebroplasty published in the New England Journal of medicine in August of 2009 came to some unexpected conclusions.The first study performed in the United States by David Kallmes, MD of the Mayo Clinic compared the vertebroplasty procedure to a sham procedure in 131 patients in 11 centers. The second study performed by Dr. Rachel Buchbinder of Monash University in Australia compared vertebroplasty to a sham procedure in 78 patients in 4 centers. Neither study found any advantage for the vertebroplasty procedure compared with the dummy procedure.

With the above findings from two independent studies in different countries you would think that there would be a significant decrease in the number of vertebroplasty procedures done in this country, right? Well not exactly, you see the doctors who perform vertebroplasty swear by it, no matter what the research says. Why would they do this? Because they have seen it work time and time again. In fact an article in the Boston Globe in response to these studies suggested that “these findings are unlikely to change the practice of many specialists, who said they don’t jibe with their years of experience”, which is what brings me to my point. Medical research is there as an aide to help doctors do the right thing, to do the best we can for our patients and offer those under our care treatments that are proven effective. Does this mean we don’t do anything that the research has yet to prove? I don’t think so.

Take into consideration spinal decompression, a treatment that has become more and more popular over the past several years. There are studies showing very good results and a high success rate, but opponents of the treatment claim that the research isn’t of high enough quality and there are no RCT (randomized clinical trials) proving it’s effectiveness. Does that mean it doesn’t work? Absolutely not, in fact I have seen it work on thousands of patients like clockwork. Over and over again, patients respond to spinal decompression, and in my program always after other treatments have failed. Now what if a study came out showing that it didn’t work, would I stop offering it? Not on your life!

I bring up this point because clinical experience in my opinion trumps medical research. An effective treatment for any condition is an effective treatment with or without peer reviewed journal articles. Most doctors who don’t have a vested interest appear to be scientifically minded and impartial until you start messing with their livelihood. In reality many aspects of medicine are not as scientifically grounded as you may think. Many of the routine procedures for back pain have not been proven or in some cases have been proven not work. Yet, they are still performed day in and day out.

Now am I saying we don’t need research? Absolutely not, I love research. I look forward to my monthly journals with anticipation. The good news is that a lot of the most recent studies on back pain and disc physiology are helping to support what I have seen in my practice over the years. That is a very satisfying feeling and one that hope helps a lot of back pain sufferers through the years.



By Randall Pruitt, DC, DACNB, DAAPM, MUAC, FACFN, CES-NASM

If you have suffered from chronic back or neck pain for sometime there may be days when you feel like you just can’t go on any longer. I have even had patients come in who have told me that suicide is not far from their thoughts on any given day. Comments like that always concern me and they certainly bring into light the devastating effects back pain can have on ones life and the lives of their loved ones.

When I first decided to focus my practice exclusively on chronic back pain sufferers I really had no idea just how important my job as a back pain doctor really would become. I have never seen a condition lead to such devastation as chronic and unrelenting back pain. It not only ruins lifestyles from an activity stand point, but it can ruin careers, marriages and tear families apart.

My observation is that because back pain can be such a difficult thing to treat, when everything has been done and a patient still suffers, spouses, significant others and family members really have a hard time understanding why the patient is still unable to perform their daily activities. Blame becomes very harsh and depression becomes a very serious side effect. I have had burly truck drivers in my office, the kind of guy you would never want to meet in a dark alley, breakdown crying over his inability to function, work and support his family and be intimate with his wife.The psychological effects alone can become a very serious problem.

A recently published study looked at the causes of premature mortality among individuals who received a permanent disability pension in Norway from 1990 to 1996. They showed that “persons on a disability pension had a strongly increased mortality rate.” Those on permanent disability claims had roughly a three-fold increase in risk of mortality compared with those not receiving a disability pension. The summary concluded that “while permanent disability related to low back pain is likely to be associated with premature mortality in some settings, the exact nature of that relationship remains uncertain.”

Based on my experience I can say with some certainty that the relationship they have a difficult time identifying is something that may ultimately prove to be intangible. Everyone has their own experience of suffering and pain.

As we know in the field of neurology pain is a very emotional and personal event, an event that can be quite different for each person. Offering patients an alternative to this suffering is really where my passion is, I am quite certain my team has altered the course of some very serious consequences associated with back pain by intervening and helping a patient get their life back. I been told on more than one occasion in the patients own words that I saved their life. So as primarily a back pain doctor you wouldn’t think that I would be dealing with life and death issues…but that couldn’t be further from the truth.



By Randall Pruitt, DC, DACNB, DAAPM, MUAC, FACFN, CES-NASM

With thousands of patient visits a year coming through my office, I am rarely surprised or annoyed by any question my patients ask.However, there is one question I have received on a few occasions that I have to admit always gets to me just a little. That question or more specifically that comment centers around my advertising. Prospective patients are a little skeptical about how they found me, citing the fact that they were curious as to what I had to say so they came in anyway. The truth is that my advertising is very informative, something that I am very proud of, gathering the appropriate information is very time consuming, but I think my patients deserve the truth. I think that it compels people to come in for a consultation because quite frankly nothing else they have tried has worked.

When I get this question or comment it doesn’t take long to quickly point out to them that if they watch TV for no more than a mere few minutes they are no doubt going to see a drug commercial or several drug commercials in that brief span of time. And many times they are personally taking at least one of the drugs I mention , most commonly Lipitor.

I also find it very interesting that they don’t see this connection right off the bat, I am curious as to why my advertising seems unprofessional to them. Is it because I am a doctor? Doctors aren’t supposed to advertise? Look in any magazine on an airplane and there are ads from facilities like the Mayo Clinic, Baylor University Medical Center, the Brown Hand Center and the Arizona Heart Institute. Are they unprofessional? I don’t think so. The truth is you have to advertise in this day and age, to get the word out. If you have a treatment or treatments that can help a large number of people I feel it is your duty as a health care professional to advertise. Especially when dangerous drugs pushed by these huge companies receive so much air time. For example, the drug Vioxx that was pulled off the market achieved rapid market penetration in 80 countries and achieved worldwide annual sales of 2.5 billion in 2003. And that was for a drug that ultimately caused severe consequences in it’s recipients.

Offering a treatment program utilizing tools like spinal decompression, manipulation under anesthesia and MedX spinal rehabilitation that provide real lasting pain relief, you can imagine how compelled I feel in getting these highly effective treatments out to the public, especially when I know the alternative is most likely surgery.

It reminds me of an encounter that I had just last year over this issue. A gentleman brought his wife in to see me for an evaluation. This poor lady had been the recipient of not one but two unsuccessful spinal surgeries and was currently on a lot of medication. To say her quality of life was decreased was a major understatement. His background was hospital administration and he was highly skeptical of a doctor who advertised. Unfortunately, he couldn’t overcome that objection and his wife wasn’t accepted into my program, so in the end she is the one who most likely is still suffering.

My point to all this is that when there are solutions to common problems, I think it is irresponsible to not make every effort to get the word out. My program has helped over 10,000 pain sufferers and my goals is to help tens of thousands more and if advertising is what brings them in then so be it.