2642 Liruma Rd #1, Mississauga, ON L5K 1Z1, Canada
Welcome to Liruma Rehabilitation Centre
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Call for help: 905-823-6256
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Welcome to Liruma Rehabilitation Centre
Call for help: 905-823-6256
Living with back pain can make even the simplest parts of your day feel like a battle you cannot win. You dread putting on your socks in the morning because bending down hurts so much to do. Or you avoid lifting your kids or your groceries because you know what will happen later on. You toss and turn all night looking for a position that does not send a sharp reminder through your spine. It is exhausting, and it wears you down in ways that go way beyond just physical pain. At Liruma Rehabilitation Centre, we see this every day, and we know there is hope for you. One of the most effective tools we use for back pain is something called spinal decompression. Let us walk through what this treatment is and whether it might be the answer you have been searching for.
The term spinal decompression sounds fancy and medical, but the idea behind it is actually quite simple to grasp. Your spine is made up of small bones stacked on top of each other like building blocks in a tower. Between each bone sits a soft, squishy disc that acts as a shock absorber for your whole body each day. When these discs get injured or just wear down over time, they can bulge out or press on nearby nerves. This pressure on the nerves is what causes that sharp, shooting pain you feel down your leg or arm. Spinal decompression works by gently pulling on your spine to create more space between those bones. Think of it like giving your spine a gentle, safe stretch that opens up space. And lets everything settle back into place.
If you have never seen a spinal decompression table before, it might look a little strange at first glance. The table is long and padded, with a moving section that can slide back and forth in a controlled way. You lie down on the table fully clothed, usually on your back or your stomach depending on where your pain lives. The therapist straps a soft harness around your hips and sometimes around your ribcage to hold you in place securely. This pull is very slow and controlled, not a sudden jerk or a fast pop like some other treatments you may know. Most sessions last between fifteen and thirty minutes, during which many people actually doze off because it feels relaxing. After the session, you get up and go about your day with no downtime or recovery needed at all.
Spinal decompression is not right for every single type of back pain, but it helps a great deal with some very common issues. The number one problem we use spinal decompression for is herniated or bulging discs in the lower back area. These bulging discs press on the nerves that run down your legs, causing pain, numbness, and tingling feelings. Spinal decompression takes pressure off those discs and gives them room to move back where they belong safely. It also works very well for degenerative disc disease, which is just a fancy way of saying your discs are wearing thin with age. People with sciatica, that sharp leg pain that shoots from your lower back down to your foot, often find great relief from spinal decompression. Even some cases of spinal stenosis, where the space for your nerves gets too narrow, can improve with this treatment. For folks who have been told their only option is surgery, spinal decompression offers a gentler path to try first. Many people avoid surgery altogether after a full course of spinal decompression treatments.
Just like with most forms of therapy, spinal decompression works best when done in a series over several weeks. Most people start to feel some relief after just three to six sessions, but real, lasting change takes more time than that. A typical full course of spinal decompression treatment involves about fifteen to twenty visits spread out over four to six weeks. At the start, you will likely come in three or four times per week while your back is still very sore and tender. As you improve, the visits drop down to two per week, then one per week, then maybe just occasional tune-ups. The effects of spinal decompression build on each other, with each session adding a little more space and a little less pain. Stopping too soon can let your discs settle back into their old, painful positions and undo your progress. Spinal decompression is not a quick fix, but for many people, it is the fix that finally works after nothing else did.
One of the best things about spinal decompression is how well it works alongside other forms of treatment. At Liruma Rehabilitation Centre, we rarely use spinal decompression all by itself with nothing else added in. The spinal decompression opens up space and takes pressure off your nerves so other treatments can work better. Your physiotherapist might then do some gentle stretching or strengthening exercises that would have hurt too much before. Your chiropractor might find that adjustments hold longer and feel better because the spine is not so compressed. This team approach means you are not just getting one tool, you are getting the whole toolbox full of options. And having more tools means you are more likely to find the combination that finally gets you out of pain for good.
If you have been living with back pain and wondering if there is a better way, we invite you to come see us. At Liruma Rehabilitation Centre, we start every new patient with a thorough assessment to understand exactly what is going on with your spine. We listen to your story, watch how you move, and use our hands to find where the trouble spots are hiding from view. If spinal decompression seems like a good fit for your specific problem, we will explain why and map out a clear plan for you. You can try a few sessions and see how your body responds before making any big decisions at all. Many people tell us that it gave them their life back after years of just managing their pain. You have been hurting long enough, and you deserve to find out if this gentle, non-surgical path can help you find the relief you have been looking for.