Bramhall Osteopathic Practice

Bramhall Osteopathic Practice

Location: Stockport, SK7

Address: 57, Woodford Road, SK7 1JR

Contact: Call 0845 680 0615 to make an appointment with the practice. Let us know if you need an evening or weekend appointment. Calls may be monitored or recorded.

Description: Friendly and professional multidisciplinary practice, established 20years. Situated near the heart of Bramhall village. Offers 4 highly qualified and experienced osteopaths. We treat a wide range of problems-from irritable or colicky babies to children with issues linked to demands of growth to adults coping with work, sports ijuries, stress, pregnancy and those in the later stages of life.

Specialities: Structural and cranial osteopathic approaches. babies; children; pregnancy; sports; chronic conditions.

 

CALL 0845 680 0615 for Bramhall Osteopathic Practice

Bramhall Osteopathic Practice - Stockport has had excellent patient feedback from 16 patients since 03/11/2009 If Bramhall Osteopathic Practice is unable to assist, other osteopaths in Stockport may be convenient.

Osteopaths at Bramhall Osteopathic Practice are happy to help patients with any treatment listed above.

Sucking Difficulty

A baby having difficulty feeding may be suffering from a nerve compression. Cranial osteopaths would be quick to look at the area at the base of the skull to determine if the nerve was affected. From an osteopathic perspective, a child that has or had difficulty latching-on to its mother's nipple during the first few weeks after birth is a potential indicator that there may be some compression of an important nerve that controls the tongue. Whilst the sucking problem may clear up after a few days or weeks, the issue of compression of the hypoglossal nerve - or indeed other nerves - may not actually be resolved fully in the intial period after birth. A detailed patient history for a child should certainly cover this issue even if the condition for which treatment is being sought is rather different.

Fibromyalgia

Acute joint pain is often associated with fibromyalgia which is a disease of the central nervous system where normal, non-painful, neural messages are interpreted by the nerve receptors as pain. This leads to intense localised pain where there should be none. The symptoms of fibromyalgia include headaches, sleeping difficulties, poor concentration, stiff muscles and enervating tiredness. Some patients suffer occasional attacks allowing them to lead fairly normal lives. However, for chronic sufferers, this disease can gravely affect quality of life. There is no single cure, however much research is being done into various therapies to help ameliorate the disability associated with the condition. Osteopathic treatment is, of course, often used to treat the associated muscle pain and many practitioners combine this wiith acupressure or acupuncture to further relieve muscular pain.