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- From: oispeggy@ubvmsd.cc.buffalo.edu (Peggy Brown)
- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Subject: Re: C-section Incision Pain, 30 months later
- Message-ID: <C0A1KH.IAp@acsu.buffalo.edu>
- Date: 3 Jan 93 12:05:00 GMT
- References: <29082@oasys.dt.navy.mil> <glen.725661828@cs.wisc.edu>
- Sender: nntp@acsu.buffalo.edu
- Organization: University at Buffalo
- Lines: 26
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-
- In article <glen.725661828@cs.wisc.edu>, glen@slate.cs.wisc.edu (Glen Ecklund) writes...
- >dsegelho@oasys.dt.navy.mil (Diane Segelhorst) writes:
- >
- >>I'd like to hear from anyone who had some lingering pain from a c-section
- >>incision, or anyone that knows a good source of information.
- >
- >My wife has had recurring problems with her incision (2.5 years), and just found
- >significant relief from an alternative source called "scar tissue release."
- >The idea, as I understand it, is that scar tissue can make bridges which then
- >get pulled easily. What this guy did was to push on the scar tissue and
- >tear it. My wife said it helped. She heard about this guy from her Physical
- >Therapist. It sounds like some doctors have good opinions about it.
- >Maybe it will be mainstream in a few years.
- >--
- >Every child shall be treated with complete respect.
- >
- >Glen Ecklund glen@cs.wisc.edu (608) 262-1318 Office, 262-1204 Dept. Sec'y
- >Department of Computer Sciences 1210 W. Dayton St., Room 3355
- >University of Wisconsin, Madison Madison, Wis. 53706 U.S.A.
-
- Those "bridges" sound like adhesions??? Adhesions can occur
- after any type of major incision. That's one of the reasons why
- people are told not to do anything strenuous while healing. I
- think they're more common after abdominal surgery.
-
- - Peggy -
-