Chronic Nerve Pain Relief with Scrambler Therapy
Scrambler Therapy offers patients of all ages a proven and effective pathway to pain-free living with an approximate 90% success rate, according to the New England Journal of Medicine. The solution is in interrupting your body’s pain pathways, “scrambling” pain signals, and sending non-pain signals to the central nervous system instead. This relieves pain symptoms caused by many neuropathic and nerve issues without the need for invasive intervention.
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Caused by an abnormal pain signal in the nervous system, often triggered by injury, illness, or stress, which makes the brain interpret normal sensations as painful.
Symptoms: Widespread muscle and joint pain, stiffness, fatigue, and extreme sensitivity to touch or movement.
Caused by inflammation, cartilage breakdown, or bone changes in joints due to osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, or other joint diseases.
Symptoms: Joint stiffness, swelling, pain, and reduced mobility, often worse in the morning or after inactivity
Caused by injury, stretching, compression, or tearing of the brachial plexus nerves that control the shoulder, arm, and hand.
Symptoms: Severe shoulder, arm, and hand pain, tingling, weakness, or numbness caused by nerve damage.
Caused by nerve damage from chemotherapy drugs that are toxic to the peripheral nerves.
Symptoms: Burning, tingling, numbness, or shooting pain in hands and feet after chemotherapy.
Caused by long-term problems such as disc degeneration, herniated discs, spinal stenosis, arthritis, muscle strain, or past injury.
Symptoms: Persistent aching, stiffness, or sharp pain in the lower or upper back lasting longer than 3 months
Caused by abnormal nerve responses after injury or surgery, leading to exaggerated pain and inflammation in the affected limb.
Symptoms: Burning pain, swelling, color or temperature changes, and skin sensitivity in an arm or leg.
Caused by long-term high blood sugar levels damaging nerves, especially in the legs and feet.
Symptoms: Numbness, burning, tingling, or stabbing pain in feet, legs, or hands linked to diabetes.
Caused by abnormalities in blood flow and nerve function, leading to episodes of burning pain, redness, and warmth in extremities.
Symptoms: Episodes of burning pain, redness, and warmth in hands or feet triggered by heat or activity.
Caused by damaged or sensitized nerves sending exaggerated pain signals from normally non-painful stimuli.
Symptoms: Painful reaction to light touch, pressure, or even clothing brushing against the skin.
Caused by persistent or worsening pain after spinal surgery, often due to scar tissue, nerve damage, or unresolved spine issues.
Symptoms: Chronic back or leg pain persisting or worsening after spinal surgery.
Caused by abnormal processing of pain signals in the brain and spinal cord, often triggered by stress, trauma, or other illnesses.
Symptoms: Widespread muscle pain, fatigue, sleep problems, and tender points across the body.
Caused by nerve damage from various factors such as diabetes, infections, toxins, trauma, or autoimmune disorders.
Symptoms: Tingling, numbness, burning, or sharp pain in hands, feet, or other areas due to nerve damage.
Caused by unknown or unidentifiable factors (cause cannot be determined).
Symptoms: Unexplained numbness, burning, tingling, or stabbing pain in extremities without a known cause.
Caused by tumor growth pressing on nerves, bones, or organs, or by cancer treatments damaging nerves.
Symptoms: Severe, constant pain caused by tumor growth, nerve compression, or cancer treatment side effects.
Caused by issues in the lower spine such as disc problems, arthritis, muscle strain, or structural abnormalities.
Symptoms: Lower back pain, stiffness, or radiating discomfort into the hips or legs.
Caused by nerve damage from the immune system attacking the protective covering (myelin) of nerves in the central nervous system.
Symptoms: Nerve pain, burning, stabbing, or muscle spasms associated with MS flare-ups.
Caused by direct injury, compression, inflammation, or disease damaging nerves.
Symptoms: Localized numbness, weakness, or shooting pain caused by nerve injury or compression.
Caused by nerve damage from diabetes, poor circulation, trauma, infections, or vitamin deficiencies.
Symptoms: Burning, tingling, stabbing pain, or loss of sensation in the legs and feet.
Caused by conditions such as AMPS, juvenile arthritis, injuries, nerve disorders, or unknown factors in developing nervous systems.
Symptoms: Persistent pain, fatigue, headaches, stomachaches, or musculoskeletal pain impacting daily activities.
Caused by damage to peripheral nerves from diabetes, toxins, infections, trauma, or autoimmune disease.
Symptoms: Numbness, tingling, burning, or weakness starting in the hands or feet, spreading upward.
Caused by nerve and brain changes after amputation, where the brain still interprets signals as if the missing limb exists.
Symptoms: Burning, stabbing, or cramping pain felt in a missing or amputated limb
Caused by nerve injury or scar tissue formation after surgery.
Symptoms: Persistent burning, tingling, or stabbing pain after surgery due to nerve damage.
Caused by nerve damage from the varicella-zoster virus (shingles) after the rash heals.
Symptoms: Burning, stabbing, or shooting nerve pain in areas where shingles rash healed.
Caused by abnormal nerve responses after injury or trauma, often grouped under CRPS Type I.
Symptoms: Severe burning pain, swelling, skin color and temperature changes after an injury.
Caused by compression or irritation of the sciatic nerve, usually from a herniated disc, bone spur, or spinal stenosis.
Symptoms: Sharp, shooting pain radiating from the lower back through the buttock and down one leg.
Caused by jaw joint misalignment, arthritis, injury, or muscle tension affecting the jaw.
Symptoms: Jaw pain, clicking, headaches, and difficulty chewing due to joint dysfunction.
Caused by inflammation of the spinal cord, often linked to autoimmune disorders, infections, or multiple sclerosis.
Symptoms: Back pain, weakness, numbness, and tingling in arms or legs, sometimes with bladder issues.
Caused by irritation or compression of the trigeminal nerve, often by a blood vessel, tumor, or multiple sclerosis.
Symptoms: Sudden, severe facial pain described as electric shock-like or stabbing, triggered by touch or movement.
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