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Media & Interactive
One of a doctor’s greatest rewards is seeing a patient make significant improvements after a procedure. The joy of seeing a patient thrive affirms the value of orthopedic surgery in improving the quality of people’s lives. Meet the Patient Recently, Dr. Daveed Frazier met with a young school teacher who was suffering from years of […]
We often think of our spine as operating as a collective unit. But, your backbone actually consists of 24 moveable joints. These joints are formed by the meeting (or articulation) of two vertebrae. Under normal circumstances, we don’t notice the parts that make up the whole. That is, we don’t notice the individual vertebrae that make up our spine. But, when we’re in pain? We tend to feel everything.
The patient was a 47-year-old woman who presented with symptoms of lower back pain. Upon physical examination, the patient reported stiffness, throbbing, and spasms in her lumbar spine (or lower back). When Dr. Frazier examined the patient’s legs, he discovered tightness in her hamstrings and weakness in her right and left legs.
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