Many patients describe their low back as feeling “stuck.” But is something really blocking the movement? Through a chronic low back pain case, Dr Huang explores why restoring movement may sometimes be less about stretching muscles and more about reducing protective responses within the nervous system.
> View articleFollow Dr Huang to Learn Clinical Diagnosis (Case 12) Recurrent Low Back Pain for Years — Not a Disc Problem, but the Way He Uses His Body Today I saw a very common case in clinic, but also a very meaningful one to share. This patient has had left-sided low back pain for about five […]
> View articleFollowing Dr. Huang in Clinical Practice (4) A 10-Year Chronic Low Back Pain: The Answer Was Not at the Pain Site, but in the Posture Some conditions are not hard to treat — they are simply misread for years. This case was a classic example of clinical reasoning correction for me. I went through layers […]
> View articleCase 5|Ten Years of Low Back Pain — A Turning Point from “Pain-Spot Thinking” to “Force-Line Thinking” ① Case Background The patient is a middle-aged male who had suffered from chronic low back pain for nearly ten years. Over the past decade, he had tried various treatments including physiotherapy, massage, chiropractic adjustments, and acupuncture. Each […]
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