How Trekke Lumbar Lift Works

The common pain generator of low back pain is one or more impinged nerves. The impingement can be caused by a number of things; bulging disc(s), bone etc, etc, and these typically result from degenerated discs.

Disc degeneration is a natural phenomenon of aging but can be aggravated by injury and other medical maladies. That said, the typical end result is that the height of the discs diminishes and some discs may bulge out or even hemorrhage, nerve channels are diminished and in extreme cases vertebrae may become misaligned.

With exception to injury or specific maladies, the main cause of disc degeneration is gravitational loading. From the moment we get up each morning we add the weight of our upper torso onto our spinal column, with the heaviest loading taking place in the lumbar region. Removing or reducing this loading can unimpinged the nerves and relieve the pain (“Muscles, spinal compression and low back pain”).

Trekke Lumbar Lift works by providing that pain relieving unloading and is the only device in the marketplace that was designed specifically as a full time treatment for many causes of low back pain, including the 85% that is undiagnosable.

Trekke’s two belts anchor Trekke to the body and as air is pumped into the device it pushes the belts away from each other, lengthening and unloading the lumbar spine.

Because Trekke is made from only soft and supple materials it can be comfortably worn all day, allowing the spine to be unloaded throughout the entire duration of use. This greatly decreases the degeneration cycle and increases the regeneration cycle of the lumbar discs.

Ambulatory Spinal Unloading

“Ambulatory spinal unloading” is the “new kid on the block” when it comes to treatment of acute and chronic low back pain. It is so new that many care givers are not yet fully aware of it.

 Anecdotally we know that relieving pressure on the discs via traction, non-surgical spinal decompression or inversion tables etc relieves the pain, we also know that continued activity opposed to inactivity is beneficial and everyone knows that stabilizing the spine and allowing strained muscles to relax and heal are critical to the healing process.

 But, until ambulatory spinal unloading came along there was no way to offer the low back pain suffer the full treatment. This new treatment modality for low back pain allows sufferer the ability to regain mobility, flexibility and activity in a pain free or pain reduced environment, allowing discs to rehabilitate, muscles to realign and mend and damaged nerves to heal.

 Ambulatory spinal unloading dramatically reduces the degenerative cycle and dramatically increases the rejuvenative cycle of the spine and is without a doubt one of the most beneficial and cost effective, non-invasive treatment modalities for acute and chronic low back pain available today.

 Ambulatory spinal unloading can be used to extend the benefits offered by stationary treatments as well as chiropractic and physiotherapy treatments or be used as a pre surgery bridge or a post surgery protection/prevention tool. 

 Typical indications for this new treatment modality are most forms of low back pain that have been caused by; degenerative disc decease, herniated or bulging disc, nerve impingement, stenosis, facet syndrome, spondylolisthesis, lumbar vertebrae compression fracture, sciatica, lordosis etc and for many “undiagnosable” causes of low back pain.

Muscles, spinal compression and low back pain

Most people don’t truly understand how muscles work and their relationship to the spinal column, so don’t fully understand their relationship to spine health.

The spinal column is a delicately balanced stack of vertebrae and discs that are held in their proper locations and orientations by muscles, and muscles are only capable of pulling (being in tension), they are not capable of pushing (being in compression). So in order for the various muscle groups to effectively do their job of keeping the finely balanced stack of vertebrae and discs in place, they are always exerting a small degree of “balanced” tension on the vertebrae which intern exert modest compressional forces on the discs.

Additional compressional force on the discs is created by gravitational loading created by your upper torso when you are upright, but the highest degree of compressional force is created when you bend over. The reason for this is that as the various muscles in the front of your body contract, increasing their tension as they pull your torso forward, opposing muscles located at your back increase their tension in order to hold your torso back.

The thing that is interesting is that there has been no increase in gravitational forces, i.e your torso did not get heavier, yet the compressional force on the discs raises alarmingly. What actually happens is the tensional forces generated by the opposing muscles as one tensions to lever the torso forward and the other tensions to keep it in check create much higher compressional forces on the discs than normal gravitational loading ever does. But, this is normal and the body for the most part is designed to manage it.

But, when a muscle is strained, the bodies natural reaction is to isolate the muscle from movement (which we sense as a stiff muscle). Since keeping the balanced stack in place requires “balanced tension”, other muscles have to be enlisted to replace the strained one. The enlisted muscles are attached at different locations and are not pulling in exactly the same direction the strained one was so they are not capable of creating that perfectly balanced tension, so put the delicately balanced spinal stacked at risk.

What were safe bending movements with a healthy back can be potentially damaging to a back with a strained muscle. As you bend forward and the muscle groups tension up to carry the levered torso, the enlisted muscles pull on the vertebrae differently than the strained muscle did and under these high loading stresses can result in damage to discs and/or create spinal misalignment.

When you strain a back muscle the body is going to enlist another muscle to fill the role and as a result your spinal health will be at risk.  Continued activity is generally accepted as the best medicine, but as we have seen, the combination of a strained back muscle and high levels of spinal loading created during some activities can potentially result in additional damage.

So, what’s the answer?

There is a new modality of treatment for low back pain, “ambulatory spinal unloading”. This new treatment relieves or reduces loading forces on the spine but allows the user the ability to carry on their normal active life style. Ambulatory spinal unloading provides the low back pain sufferer the ability to mend and heal in a pain reduced or pain free environment without the risk of additional damage.

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