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I reverted a recent edit because there was no edit summary to explain its purpose, and the edit removed a sourced statement. A more minor issue is that the term "some believe" is a red flag at Wikipedia: articles should avoid such vagueness (see WP:WTA). Please add any comments here (click "edit" on the far right of the heading of this section): What is the problem? Is the source invalid? Johnuniq ( talk) 04:21, 10 July 2011 (UTC)
==SIJD Abnormalities and Resultant Symptoms due to increased Activities== (treatments section) New Heading or Discussion Request: I suffer SIJD and LLD, over the years i have developed other symptoms due to the painful conditions, i would like to request the 'article contributing community', a new heading that discuss post/resultant symptoms that may arise in cases of continuation of activities while suffering with SIJD, Compensatory Scoliosis and LLD. Due to unawareness of my conditions and ignoring pains i continued gym workout and took muscle growth supplements (for a few months), that caused following issues over the years - muscular asymmetry in shoulders (lifted on left, right one is drifted outwards and lower), uneven pecs, weak left forearm and over grown right forearm, smaller left calve, weak flys on left shoulder. other resultant symptoms include slipped disc, hemorrhoids-piles, nauseas-vomiting, neck pains, lower-back pains, upper spinal stress and head rotation issues, scoliosis spinal rotation, ribs are rotated and tilted, needle piercing pains, weakness tiredness and exhaustion, stresses and memory loss minor speech disorder or forgetfulness during dialogues, trauma fear and emptiness or too many thoughts, indigestion, damaged working routines, hair on right side of head falling, eyes seem uneven, many other noted illnesses. how can physiotherapy, corrective workout and strict diet play important role in overcoming such issues. in past i tried taking anti-inflammation medicine but they caused other side-effects, while trying to remove one symptom the other-one arises (unless the root cause is cured the resultant symptoms keep on coming back), what treatment sequences are used in such cases. I have mentioned the above for 'resultant symptom discussion cases and possible treatments' discussion... the current article contribution has improved over the years, it is easier to notify others of the illness, i don't have to repeat the entire story every time, while explaining the long list of issues people often think i am exaggerating about the condition, but medical reports and test say otherwise seem more convincing... — Preceding unsigned comment added by Bilalmunir80 ( talk • contribs) 13:53, 28 October 2013 (UTC)
There's at least one link gone bad that I don't have time to repair, but someone might:
I found many different names for this disorder. I made them redirects to this article, and I added what seemed to be the most popular alternative names to the introduction.
I found the article sacroiliitis while searching for alternative names. I found that some websites used sacroiliitis as an alternative name for sacroiliac joint dysfunction (SJD) or the alternative names I made into redirects. I left the sacroiliitis article intact, but I added a link to this article in the "see also" section, and I put a link to the sacroiliitis article in the SJD article (this article) in its "see also" section.
In addition, I made a disambiguation page for the term " sacroiliac joint pain" ("sacroiliac pain" redirects to it). I explained why I did this on the talk page of the disambiguation page.
I am hoping that an expert in the subject (or at least an enthusiast) could decide what, if anything, to do with both the sacroiliitis article and the sacroiliac joint pain disambiguation page. I am fine with whatever choices are made, but I hope that you could explain your reasoning in the edit summary, when possible, or the article's talk page, when necessary for length. If you want to contact me for some reason, please use my user talk page rather than posting here. Thanks, Kjkolb ( talk) 04:44, 22 September 2014 (UTC)
Prolotherapy is thus far dismissed as junk science and should be removed from the article. Or at leat stated that prolotherapy is at most, an alternative and experimental treatment — Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.185.215.187 ( talk) 03:05, 10 June 2015 (UTC)
This is actually not true. See the very well done randomized controlled trial by Kim et al in 2010 for example: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21138388/ - Anonymous, 16/7/20 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 219.88.232.98 ( talk) 10:31, 16 July 2020 (UTC)
![]() | This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||
|
I reverted a recent edit because there was no edit summary to explain its purpose, and the edit removed a sourced statement. A more minor issue is that the term "some believe" is a red flag at Wikipedia: articles should avoid such vagueness (see WP:WTA). Please add any comments here (click "edit" on the far right of the heading of this section): What is the problem? Is the source invalid? Johnuniq ( talk) 04:21, 10 July 2011 (UTC)
==SIJD Abnormalities and Resultant Symptoms due to increased Activities== (treatments section) New Heading or Discussion Request: I suffer SIJD and LLD, over the years i have developed other symptoms due to the painful conditions, i would like to request the 'article contributing community', a new heading that discuss post/resultant symptoms that may arise in cases of continuation of activities while suffering with SIJD, Compensatory Scoliosis and LLD. Due to unawareness of my conditions and ignoring pains i continued gym workout and took muscle growth supplements (for a few months), that caused following issues over the years - muscular asymmetry in shoulders (lifted on left, right one is drifted outwards and lower), uneven pecs, weak left forearm and over grown right forearm, smaller left calve, weak flys on left shoulder. other resultant symptoms include slipped disc, hemorrhoids-piles, nauseas-vomiting, neck pains, lower-back pains, upper spinal stress and head rotation issues, scoliosis spinal rotation, ribs are rotated and tilted, needle piercing pains, weakness tiredness and exhaustion, stresses and memory loss minor speech disorder or forgetfulness during dialogues, trauma fear and emptiness or too many thoughts, indigestion, damaged working routines, hair on right side of head falling, eyes seem uneven, many other noted illnesses. how can physiotherapy, corrective workout and strict diet play important role in overcoming such issues. in past i tried taking anti-inflammation medicine but they caused other side-effects, while trying to remove one symptom the other-one arises (unless the root cause is cured the resultant symptoms keep on coming back), what treatment sequences are used in such cases. I have mentioned the above for 'resultant symptom discussion cases and possible treatments' discussion... the current article contribution has improved over the years, it is easier to notify others of the illness, i don't have to repeat the entire story every time, while explaining the long list of issues people often think i am exaggerating about the condition, but medical reports and test say otherwise seem more convincing... — Preceding unsigned comment added by Bilalmunir80 ( talk • contribs) 13:53, 28 October 2013 (UTC)
There's at least one link gone bad that I don't have time to repair, but someone might:
I found many different names for this disorder. I made them redirects to this article, and I added what seemed to be the most popular alternative names to the introduction.
I found the article sacroiliitis while searching for alternative names. I found that some websites used sacroiliitis as an alternative name for sacroiliac joint dysfunction (SJD) or the alternative names I made into redirects. I left the sacroiliitis article intact, but I added a link to this article in the "see also" section, and I put a link to the sacroiliitis article in the SJD article (this article) in its "see also" section.
In addition, I made a disambiguation page for the term " sacroiliac joint pain" ("sacroiliac pain" redirects to it). I explained why I did this on the talk page of the disambiguation page.
I am hoping that an expert in the subject (or at least an enthusiast) could decide what, if anything, to do with both the sacroiliitis article and the sacroiliac joint pain disambiguation page. I am fine with whatever choices are made, but I hope that you could explain your reasoning in the edit summary, when possible, or the article's talk page, when necessary for length. If you want to contact me for some reason, please use my user talk page rather than posting here. Thanks, Kjkolb ( talk) 04:44, 22 September 2014 (UTC)
Prolotherapy is thus far dismissed as junk science and should be removed from the article. Or at leat stated that prolotherapy is at most, an alternative and experimental treatment — Preceding unsigned comment added by 72.185.215.187 ( talk) 03:05, 10 June 2015 (UTC)
This is actually not true. See the very well done randomized controlled trial by Kim et al in 2010 for example: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21138388/ - Anonymous, 16/7/20 — Preceding unsigned comment added by 219.88.232.98 ( talk) 10:31, 16 July 2020 (UTC)