What's your experience of going to a chiropractor?

Geo-TH,In

Well-known Member
I'm 66 and have spondylolisthesis, bone spurs, and arthritis. I refused to have spinal fusion 11 years ago. Too many surgeries that go bad and too many follow up surgeries. Some are worse after surgery and on meds for the rest of their lifes.

I've always thought bone crushers are quacks, but finally decided after being pain 24/7 to give them a try.

The adjustments on my neck some good but L4 & L5 is hurting more. So I stopped the adjustments and going for a massage, which seems to be helpful.

What are your experiences? Good or bad like the link below?
Whats the harm?
 

I have many years experience in listening to and reading stories about Chiropractic. I am convinced that it is one of those issues that leads to a healthy debate that pretty much always ends in a draw.
 
George, if you were here Id twist your neck and throw you down a flight of stairs for less money then a chiropractor charges I bet lol

John T
 
A single trip to a chiropractor may be all you need but in some cases where the vertebrae are badly misaligned or have been misaligned for a long time, the back may hurt worse as muscles and nerves try to pull the back to its original position. Another trip may take care of that. A good massage also helps to loosen muscles and relieve the sore muscles. Ideally the massage and then the chiro might be better as the chiro has to deal with muscles that are very tight and resist his attempts to get the vertebrae aligned.

Not all chiropractors are alike either. Some have better technique than others. I have a problem back and I'll use one chiro most of the time but occasionally I need the services of a different one as his technique and my back work better together.
 
Well I have been going to them off and on for most my life since a teenager. I know I can have really weird pains that go away after a treatment. Just tough to stay aligned up ! Massage really helps too. Maybe even more if you find a good one ,but it gets pretty expensive so I don't go much at all.
I see spinal decompression advertised more and more lately to help your disc build back up ? You may want to try it. I keep thinking I should too before I get really bad it may work better ? But there again it is not cheap.
 
They absolutely don't impress me at the slightest bit. Wife was referred by a friend due to a stiff back. Guy says our insurance will pay for about 80 bucks of the total. I asked what the "total" meant. Fella says 35 office visits on his program. I told him my back was stiff too (even though it was not), he says 38 visits for me. Walked out and never looked back! Those guys can't prescribe any medication, so insurance companies claim they are not a doctor. Find ya one of those massage therapists!
 
been going to the same 1 since 1987. I've given him enough money to put his kids thru college. But if I did not go-I'd be in a nursing home or someplace else. Instead of going twice a week now-I took a desk job 9 years ago and am now down to going once a month.
 
A friend worked on a chiropractors associations account doing graphic design for their internal publications. So what sort of things would their trade mag and flyers have in them? Tips to help clients, helpful strategies for long term injuries? Nope. Entirely focused on obtaining and keeping clients for as long as possible. How to make them feel like they need to come back for more treatments.

Physiotherapists and massage seem to make slower gains but seem to be longer lasting repairs.
 
In my life I've never had a medical doctor help me until my chiropractor got his medical degree. I've never had a chiropractor that didn't improve my health. I remember when I was a child I got pneumonia and my mother took me to the doctor a couple of times with my condition getting worse and worse. I finally got to a point where I could barely breath so my mother took me to her chiropractor and the guy worked over my back with a vibrator on the back of his hand. First thing you know the gunk started coming up and by the time I left the office I could barely tell I had pneumonia.

Over the years I've had back trouble from time to time doing construction work and the chiropractor has kept me going. Doctors have just wanted to run tests and do nothing.
 
Started going to one when I was 16 after hurting my back loading a Model T on a trailer. Have been to a few over the years that I would not send a dog to unless I hated the dog. Found one last year that really got me back on my feet after my back got so bad I could barely walk. I had been a pallbearer at my aunts funeral. He really helped me.
He is very down to earth and I have sent him quite a few customers. He told me that the ag related people in our area are some of the nicest clients he has. He has come out to our place with his young son and helped with syrup cooking. He always wants to know what is going on on the farm.
Office visit is $45 and I only pay $12 with the insurance I have.
You just have to watch out for the ones that want to get you hooked on coming in all the time.
Richard in NW SC
 
My wife's back and neck gets out of 'whack' sometimes a trip or 2 to the chiropractor
solves the problem and makes the pain disappear.Regular Dr wanted to do extensive surgery and said
it might not cure the problem.A fellow I worked with would get a crick in his back and be barely able to walk, a trip to the chiropractor would get him fixed up and back to normal.
 
About 30 yrs ago, I was carrying a large stack of books on my hip and twisted my back. Hurt like heck for 2 days and couldn't move much. Couldn't even stand up straight. Neighbor suggested her chiropractor. I limped in and he "cracked" my back. Took about 30 seconds. Immediate relief and I stood up and could move freely. Then he says, "it's your diet, here take these clorophyll pills and come back in 2 weeks for your next adjustment". Huh? He also said I should get on his "regular adjustment program". Walked out and never went to him or any other one again.

My wife had a similar experience. Since then, our backs have acted up at times as we're pretty active people and in our 60's with moderate arthritis in spots. But stretching exercises and Advil take care of it.

So, my feelings are mixed. They helped us when we had a need but I think those that run to them regularly for every ache or pain are tossing their money away. In fact, I know one lady who had gone to one for years on a regular basis and has had to have back surgery twice. Seems like the more she went to the chiropractor, the worse her back got.
 
Once upon a time, I had surgery on my back to remediate an old Marine Corps injury. I've had problems with lower back pain since the injury in the Corps.

I started going to a particular chiropractor several years ago. (Actually, he's the son of an old high school buddy). He took x-rays and evaluated them on the first visit. I went twice a week to start, now I'm down to once a month, and have had less pain since I started. A recent set of routine x-rays showed my back to be straighter and the vertebrae in noticeably better alignment than on the initial x-rays.

Chiropractic is a subject there is never ending argument over, but in my case you can't argue with results.

There once was an osteopath in town, but he retired and is now deceased. He always did good work. Osteopathy seems to be a combination of chiropractic and massage, which makes sense, but you seldom hear of it anymore.
 
I went to one years ago for lower back and leg pain and after several months with no improvement I went to a orthopedic surgeon. He said no way a chiropractor would ever help and ended up with surgery. Thats been over 20 years ago and no trouble with pain going down leg.
 
Geo, I've had mixed results. I've been to some that have bells, whistles and gizmos, who are far better at chicanery than spinal adjustments and want me to keep coming back until it's right (and their third vacation home is paid for).

I've been to others who 'fix it' the first time. Sadly the last good one I went to has retired, and the new one I tried a few years ago is financing her new truck and skydiving on folks like me who twist wrong hefting firewood. I've been training my daughter to crack it as needed. She's not quite as confident or proficient, but still pops the trouble spots and relieves the pain most of the time.
 
My wife's old chiropracter, now deceased, told her that if he couldn't fix her 'pinched nerve' in one visit, there was no use returning.
We'd like to find another one with that attitude!
 
Find yourself a D.O. Doctor of Osteopathic medicine. They are same as an MD, but are trained in treating the body as a whole system vs piece parts - like back or neck or toe only. That's how I understand it. They can do manipulations too and if it needs to go beyond that, do whatever a MD can do, including prescribing medicine.

Good luck,
Bill
 
I watched a show on PBS about a program that a retired ballerina developed. A woman, who had been told that she would need a series of back surgeries, uses this program. She had her first surgery when the pain was so bad that she would pass out. Then she found this exercise program and it has been ten years since that first surgery and she does not have any pain.
My chiropractor advocates walking and exercise to improve one's back health. It is a pay me now or later situation. My brother in law tried yoga and said it helped his back.
Bottom line, if you use the right exercises, you will improve your back health by yourself. If you do not do that, then you will need someone else, when the pain stops you.
My girlfriend stopped going to the chiropractor when an x-ray showed that he was doing more harm than good. She went to a physical therapist and they really helped her. But you have to get a good one there also.
SDE
 
I've been going to a back cracker for almost 40 years off and on. I've had mostly good experiences. I only remember once when I went out worse than I went in. I sure can't say that about a MD. One thing I have seen is that the newer Chiropractors are a lot better than the old ones. They are more into developing the muscles to keep things in line. The Chiropractor that I go to now is a younger lady, so far she has kept me going for 7 years without the drugs the MD wanted to put me on.
There are limitations to what they can do as in all professions there are some that are overly confident in their own abilities, but I personally have a lot more confidence in a chiropractor than the MD's that occupy the golf courses now days.
 
My experience was not good, but that may have just been a bad chiropractor.

Didn't take long to realize this was nothing but a money grab. Insisted on doing xrays to be sure nothing was broken though I assured him I hadn't been in any accident, just sore stiff neck. Had me bend my head down as far as possible, took the picture, then showed me my neck was crooked... As in bent as far forward as possible! DUH!

First treatment he did something that made my back pop all the way down. That felt better for a few minutes, but nothing long term. Make appointment for next week.

Next week he had me lay flat, put warm rocks on my back. Make appointment for next week.

Next he came in ran his thumbs down my back bone, took all of 10 seconds. Make appointment next week. I questioned the lack of services for my $50 payment, was told "Oh if you stop coming, you'll get much worse, end up in the hospital, this takes time!"

Never went back, didn't end up in the hospital.
 
I have a lot of arthritis in my neck and back. My chiro really does help. He does not do a bunch of xrays, but uses the IR meter to determine trouble areas. He tells me to come when I need it, and does not push return visits. I think some of them really push xrays and return visits, which I think is a scam.
 
Be careful. I too had spondylolisthesis. There is nothing a chiropractor can do for what is basically a broken back.
The one i tried would put icepacks on my back for 45 minutes before he worked and of course that helped the pain. But it was the ice...not the manipulation.

Since 2008 I've had 2 back surgeries...fusions. Both helped a lot....but my fault...i went back to heavy lifting, riding horses, life as usual after the first surgery....and broke it again. Second surgery much more complex because of my stupidity. Now I have very little pain 2years out.. but I am very restricted. No lifting, no horse or zero turn mower riding, wear a brace when on a tractor. I feel so good that i want to do more...but I know better.

The pain was beyond belief...I now have a life again. I had no choice, had to have the surgery to live.

IMHO a chiropractor can not help what you have.

Let me know if you want to talk about the surgery.
 
many years ago, I went to the Ortman clinic in Canasota South Dakota. I stay'd a week. They have their own technique- use the back mussels to line up your back. They were the best I've ever been to, but I cant get away for a week at a time now. They were very reasonable.
 
"bells, whistles and gizmos, who are far better at chicanery", ha, ha.
Anyone been in to see a chiropractor who practices 'Kinesiology',
now there's racket!!
 
Insurance at work used to cover it.
I'd only go when I was hurt, never regularly, one leg too short kinda hurt.
They did crack me back into place and give some relief.
Now that I have to pay co-pays, I don't go.
Time heals too.
(and a little forethought helps even more..if it hurts when I do this...I don't do this...)

tips,
Make sure your doc is big enough to handle you if you are a big guy.

after the first time of that neck crack thing, I never let them do it again. felt too risky.

back problems? lead with your un-natural foot when you are stepping in to lift.
everybody knows to lift with your legs, don't forget your eyes are connected to everything...look at the sky.
Don't reach for anything. pretend your arms are a foot long. take that step closer.( this one helps bad shoulders too)
 
(quoted from post at 05:10:30 07/09/15)

I've had, overall, really good luck with them - even after a doctor-prescribed 'rehab' specialist had my neck and head movement reduced to 75 per cent of 'normal' - i've found that those using the 'Palmer method' are the best. Over the last 35+ years they have straightened out my back, neck and one shoulder. Get one that you like and let him/her know that you want an adjustment that will last awhile; that you don't want to be coming in every other day. :)
 
I've suffered from back pain in lower righ thand side for 30 years. Eventually found a young chiro who looked at the way I stood and put his finger straight onto the point where the problem was. 3 sessions and he helped me more than any other bone-cruncher I'd visited before.

His best advice was for me never to sit for longer than 1 hour, get up and move around to loosen up the joints.

I was driving 50K miles a year in a 4x4 so long days hunched over the steering wheel. Since then I drive for 1 hour, stop and walk along the lay-by/pull-in on the road side, up and back 3 times.

Same in the evening, sitting on sofa or arm chair, get up and walk upstairs or around the garden for a few minutes.
 
As stated Chiropractors have their limitations. Think of them this way, if you take your tractor in that isn't running properly, a mechanic can do a tune up which will help but if the engine is beyond that simple repair he cant just fix it with a tune up. MOST chiropractors work with what you have. That is all they can do. I go frequently as I can hardly function much if I don't. Muscle work and chiropractic can help. A person can end up getting neck problems because of tight muscles in the low back. Does your massage therapist work on the psoas muscles or piriformis muscles? The psoas is a hip flexor muscle attached to the front part of the hip and the front part of the spine. It goes in to motion when you lift your leg to walk forward. When they get tight they can twist your hips which strains other muscles. The piriformis muscle attaches to the sacrum (tailbone) and goes to the outer side part of your hip. I have heard stories of people going in for surgery for leg pain because the sciatic nerve is getting pinched by the piriformis muslce, while massage in certain cases can alleviate the pain. Light stretches may help you as well. There are some chiropractors who do manual side posture for the low back, some do drop table and some use the activator. One technique might work better than others for you. Understanding what chiropractic is and its limitations are most important. If you are sick and go in to the doctor once and it didn't help, once may not be enough. In most cases a person is dealing with years of strained muscles and wear and tear from that on your spine. As for the website link, I always look if they are trying to sell me something. What about all the people that chiropractic has helped? What about all the medical doctors visits people have and end up worse. I would bet that would out number chiropractic ones. There might have been underlying problems that weren't mentioned in the stories on there. The spine is held in place by muscles and the bones and nerves are what controls the muscles, they work together. Massage is very important as well.
 
Forgot to add, don't forget the glute muscles when you get a massage. They have a lot to do with low back pain. In my case I have had to kind of direct them to the problem as some massage therapist go through the routine of what they learned in school and nothing else. Finding a good massage therapist is as important as finding a good chiropractor.
 
When my back "goes out" it takes about a week or so of careful movement and pain before it seems to go back to normal. If I go to a chiropractor it also takes about a week or so of careful movement and pain before it goes back to normal - except I have less money.
 
I found a good one before I left Fargo 30 years ago; that old guy could take care of my pain with one adjustment. Haven't found a good one since, so don't even go to any now.
 
I occasionally visit a chiropractor for sciatic nerves adjustment. The one I have now is pretty good and usually does it in one adjustment.. My gripe is that he hooks(trys to) hook you up to a machine for 15 minutes and charges an extra 10 bucks which the medicare doesn't pay for. In the 1930s and 1940's my dad visited a guy in Cleveland ohio called a bloodless surgeon . He was taken there by a baseball pitcher Bob Feller. This guy was fantastic. he could and did fix you with one visit. He was very old (probably in his 60's) when I met him. He died in the late 40's Then my dad visited a chiropractor twice a week forever. Sort of like being on dope. The chiropractor then retired to Canada in his 50's and lived well. Nuff said
 
I have never visited a chiropractor. Marilyn has though and he helped her with whatever her problem was. My mother took her nurses training in the early forties and became An RN. She was very adamantly against chiropractors. She told me about people who were permanently wrecked by them. This was 75 years ago when the practice was in it's infancy. As I understand it was started by a guy with the last name of Palmer in Des Moines Ia and the Palmer school of Chiropractic is still there as far as I know. I do know the modern chiropractic graduate has to go to as much schooling as a regular MD so they aren't just given a few classes and sent out the door.

Two people I know of kept going to the chiro for pain treatment when the pain was caused by undiagnosed cancer. When they finally found out it was cancer it was too late. In the defense of the chiro, medical doctors mis-diagnose too. I have a brother-in-law who is sucked in from head to toe by a chiro who has him convinced he has to stay in 'alignment' to stay healthy. He makes from one to three visits a week to the guy and has for years. He has no real health problems, no spinal or general structural problems, so are the treatments working, or is he just generally healthy anyway? I don't have the answer.
 
Sounds like Granny's flu medicine from Beverly Hill Billys . She said if you take it every day for two weeks the flu would be cured. I am a lot like you. Never been to a chiropractor. Have injured by back jillions of times. Nothing totally debilitating but hard to move around. I move very carefully, never took pain killers as I felt that I might get relief from pain and hurt my back worse unknowingly. I am 78 now and legs, knees etc getting really painful so started taking some Aleve lately. They will have to get a whole lot worse before they start cutting me though and maybe will be too old to have it done then. .
 
I have. It does work well. Best thing, made in china lol? I have had acupuncture with electric stimulation also. I actually almost pegged out his machine.
 
Being in alignment is important in the long run. So many times people don't go in because it doesn't hurt any more or feels better. From what I understand your body adapts to the change and the pain signals aren't sent to the brain any longer, until you move wrong and then realize it is still there. Long term it will help with flexibility which helps in so many things beside just movement. When your muscles are tight and you don't stretch it can cause a feeling of tiredness because your muscles don't fully "engage" through out the day.
 
Have had a DO most of my life.
Was in a bad auto accident 15 years ago blew out C4-C6 doc said no surgery IF,1 year acupuncture, adjustment, therapy.
AND sell my excavation company and get another occupation.

Went almost 10 years, no pain,then started again, no DO here.
Went to Dr., got drug"s
Friend says you need to see Dr. Bob! so I did, He understood that muscles and soft tissue are also at work here, he did adjustment, message and heat pack with electric stimulus. Done deal in one visit.
Now I have an inversion table (GREAT!!) and a little electric "twitchier"
 
(quoted from post at 15:08:11 07/09/15) Being in alignment is important in the long run. So many times people don't go in because it doesn't hurt any more or feels better. From what I understand your body adapts to the change and the pain signals aren't sent to the brain any longer, until you move wrong and then realize it is still there. Long term it will help with flexibility which helps in so many things beside just movement. When your muscles are tight and you don't stretch it can cause a feeling of tiredness because your muscles don't fully "engage" through out the day.

The way it was explained to me was that keeping everything aligned and unrestricted is just like a tractor's electrical and lubrication (see how that worked in :D ) Just because something isn't hurting doesn't mean all is OK. Like just because the oil light doesn't come on doesn't necessarily mean all is OK, the bulb may be burned out. I prefer a chiropractor because my family has had some really bad experiences with MD's misdiagnosing. Prescribing the wrong or to much drugs. I recently had a cousin go to the ER for a brown recluse spider bite. They gave her a tetnus shot and sent her home, that got bad in a hurry. Of course a chiropractor is of no use for that type of injury.
 
JohnT,
You are too kind. Bill Wilson would push me down stairs for fun,just to see if I could walk again.
 
Wilson's the last of his kind, they broke the mold, aint that a GOOD thing lol Ask him about the time I complained my Golf Cart wouldn't fit between the wheel wells of my pickup SO HE BREAKS OUT HIS SAWZALL AND HACKS A COUPLE INCHES OFF EACH SIDE AND BY GOLLY IT FITS IN THERE NOW.

John T
 
In the last 35 years I have been to several different Chiropractors and each seemed to have a different treatment for the same problem, lower back. Example, I was taking a leak one day and my back just let out a loud crack and I could not move for several minutes. My lower back will just pop out causing my hips to twist.
My current chiropractor fixes me up in one visit. He spends a lot of time stretching out my lower back muscles before he adjusts me and then I get the shock treatment. I have him crank it up high.
 
spondylolisthesis..is a broken back. If you have a confirmed diagnosis of spondylolisthesis do not mess around with any one but a top notch doctor. You let some uninformed guy snap you the wrong way and you will be paralysed forever. It can rupture your spinal cord so easy... it really is scary. Look up the diagrams up on the internet. You are playing with fire. Don't be stupid to save $50 bucks. What you have is serious. Be very very careful.
 
2 neurologists confirmed my condition. I've lived with it all my life. Fusion is scary too. The bone crushers won't touch my lower back again. Walking is good for my condition, makes back mussels stronger. I sleep on the floor to keep bones from slipping while I sleep.

The quack did some good on my neck. I can turn it without pain. Going to leave the rest of my upper body to a massage therapist.
 
Back really bothered me so I finally went to one. After several treatments I couldn't hardly walk. Finally went to a real doctor. He took xrays and an MRI. The spot the quactor was trying to get back inline was actually a bone spur that was severely inflamed from his handy work. Took a long time to get over it. A good therapeutic message is the only way to go. No stress on the spine-just relaxed muscles and the one I went to had me doing therapy on several of their machines as well.
 
I go to both and both have done me a world of good. If I had just gone with the medical Dr 40 years ago I would have no use of my arms today. X-rays first thing done.
 
Yours evidently did not do the first thing he was supposed to do and that was take X-rays, then he would have known what was the problem or was to dumb to understand what he easily could have seen just from those required x-rays.
 
I have good ones of both. First chiropractor was blind and his wife was trained to take the e-rays and translate into braile, he retired and passed away several years ago. If it had not been for him I would not have any use of my arms for 40 years now. Also my Father-in-law was a Pharamist his whole life, also had a degree in bacteroligy. He had said many a time he had to call the medical Dr and get them straightened out. 2 more years of school and he could have been a medical Dr but said 6 years was enough.
 
I used to go to chiropractor quite regularly with good and bad results. I found a RMT did a much better job. My last visit to a chiropractor made the problem worse. It ended up being a herniated disk. I thought my mobility days were over. My wife bought me an Inversion Table all though it was not recommended by my Dr. 5 minutes when I have a sore back keeps me walking with no pain. She bought mine from Costco. Figured if it didn't work it could go back.
Dave
 
Back in 1997 I had a Chiropractor tell me I required a laminectomy at L4-L5. My G.P. questioned his findings! I saw a specialist ...... I had a laminectomy on January,15.1997 and the operation was a total success!. I'm sure there are great painters and poor painters. Great antique tractor mechanics and those that have no business ever touching a wrench let a lone own and operate a piece of equipment.
Bob.....
 
As far as I am concerned, chiropractors are all smoke and mirrors.
Consider? They give you this cock-and-bull story about "alignment" of your bones, etc. Well, consider that your body is a moving, living, fluid entity. Somebody pushing, pulling, massaging, or otherwise "manipulating" your internal parts - like bones - and telling you that after he has moved those parts that they will stay where he put them??? NOT!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Kind of like tucking in your shirt tail and then going out in the field and pitching bales for an afternoon. Does your shirt tail stay tucked in??? Of course not.
My point is this: You are constantly moving - as are all of the supposedly "aligned" parts - whether they be bones, tendons, or your liver. I see NO way to "align" internal body parts and expect them to stay "aligned." Sounds like a lot of profitable, legal fraud to me. JMHO.
 
A lot of the upfront, several treatments in a row are designed to retrain the muscles of your body to keep you in alignment. Muscles have memory and that is why a lot of times things don't stay in place. When your body has been out of alignment for years and the muscles are tight, your body adapts back into where it was before. Yes your spine does move and flex when you move as it is supposed to but when something is out of alignment the muscles in that area tighten to prevent injury to that area. It isn't just about flexibility, a medical doctor had told me the discs in your spine do not have their own blood supply. They are nerve fed. They get their nourishment from the squeezing and contracting of your muscles as you move, hence why being flexible is important. As I was told one time, when a person is younger (barring any injuries) your body will correct its self back into alignment. When it cant do that anymore that is where the chiropractor comes in to play. Your body wants to be in alignment. A person can go to a medical doctor and go through therapy for $800-$1200 and hope it corrects its self or you can try a chiropractor for under $50 and in most cases get immediate relief. Yes all cases are different but all doctors have their place.
 
My old DO and some chiro's have explained to me that the adjustment process just releases the nitrogen bubbles that form between the vertebra, there by letting them go back to where they belong, hense the sore muscles and slight dizziness after the adjustment.
 
Went to an old-timer when I lived in Ohio. I think he helped til he put me on the traction table and pulled me back out. Tried another practice, younger docs, that was doing my uncle some good. He told me he knew what the problem was, and took a couple x-rays to verify.
3 visits a week for a month, 2 for another month, and got my neck straightened out good. Had 3 bones slid back on the others pinching nerves and causing carpal tunnel symptoms. I could tell the difference in my mood after the first week.
When I moved back to Pennsylvania I tried out several before finding one that did some good. I'd tell them I need loosened up good before any adjustment and they'd snap crackle pop out the door. I had a severe headache by the time I got stood up straight from that one. Wouldn't send my worst enemy to him.
The one I see now just graduated a couple years ago and is real good. Told her put the heat and electric to me first and she does. She got a couple vertebrae between my shoulder blades to move that haven't moved in a long time. Doesn't crack my neck because the first time she did she had to write the check for me, my hands went numb. Just moves my head around with some muscle work. Flexion table hurt my lower back so she grabs my foot and shakes it somehow, and it actually helps. Just wish I could afford a visit more often.
Loosening the muscles first seems to be the biggest thing. If they are still tight for the adjustment, they het pulled on, then want to pull everything right back out.
Once you find a good one a chiropractor is well worth the money. You just have to kiss a few frogs first, so to speak. Of the 9 practices I've been to, I think 5 chiropractors at 3 practices have been worth a darn. I won't go under the knife til I've had a couple good ones tell me there's nothing more they can do.
 

We sell tractor parts! We have the parts you need to repair your tractor - the right parts. Our low prices and years of research make us your best choice when you need parts. Shop Online Today.

Back
Top