Res-Q Actiflex
It also helps explain why two different people with the same Res-Q Actiflex Review injury may have completely different responses. When I am treating patients, there are often times when I see two people with similar injuries. It is not surprising for me to hear one patient express that it feels ok, a little sore, but I can still go for a 10 mile run, while another is hobbling around in agonizing pain and can barely walk.
The same science that has shed light on the pathways involved with the sensations of pain also now tell us that pain is not merely just a subjective sensation that is uncomfortable to experience. People in pain have changes that occur in their nervous system and the wiring of their brain, ultimately resulting in chronic pain and disability. When this occurs, an individual may experience mild to severe pain even without having any identifiable injury or cause.
For anyone experiencing chronic pain, a complex series of changes has occurred in the electrical circuitry of your nervous system which leaves you with ongoing suffering even without any injury. In essence, your nervous system has learned to be more perceptive to pain; your pain stimulating pathways have been left in an on position.
The good news is that your nervous system can be taught to function normally again if it is provided with the right stimulus. One of the key teachers involved in normalizing the brain to reduce chronic pain is movement. Movement has the ability to become medicine if properly done and has been used since the beginning of time for pain relief. Movement is also validated in numerous clinical trials as an effective treatment for muscle and joint pain.
