You’ve had tests done. Imaging is normal. Blood work comes back unremarkable. Your doctor tells you there’s nothing structurally wrong. And yet the pain continues — widespread, unpredictable, disproportionate to anything that should be causing it. If this describes your experience, there is a very good chance you are dealing with central sensitization. Central sensitization […]
Posts
What Is Chronic Pain? The Neuroscience Behind Why Pain Persists
Most people think of pain as a simple equation: damage occurs, pain signals travel to the brain, you feel pain. When the damage heals, the pain stops. This model works well for acute pain — a sprained ankle, a cut finger, a broken bone. But for chronic pain, this model fails completely. And that failure […]
Functional Neurology for Spinal Stenosis: How Brain Retraining Reduces Pain
Spinal stenosis is most often described as a structural problem — bone spurs, thickened ligaments, narrowed canals pressing on nerves. Surgery addresses the structure. Pain medications mute the signal. But for many patients, neither provides lasting relief. Why? Because spinal stenosis is not just a structural problem. It is also a neurological one. Functional neurology […]
Spinal Stenosis vs. Herniated Disc: Key Differences Explained
Two of the most common causes of back and leg pain — spinal stenosis and herniated discs — are frequently confused with each other. They can produce similar symptoms, often coexist in the same patient, and are both commonly found on MRI in older adults. But they are distinct conditions with different underlying mechanisms, different […]
Neurogenic Claudication: Why Walking Makes Your Legs Hurt
You can walk into a grocery store just fine — but by the time you reach the third aisle, your legs feel heavy, burning, and weak. You stop, lean on the cart, and within a minute or two the sensation passes. Then you walk again, and it happens once more. This cycle — pain or […]
Lumbar Spinal Stenosis: Symptoms, Causes and Non-Surgical Treatment
Lumbar spinal stenosis is the most common form of spinal stenosis — and the one most likely to bring patients into Dr. Veselak’s office. It develops in the lower back, where the spinal canal narrows and puts pressure on the bundle of nerve roots that control function in the legs, hips, and bladder. When those […]