About Me

My photo
Wilton Manors, Florida, Broward County, Florida
2608 NE 16th Avenue Wilton Manors, FL 33334-4319 Telephone: 954-463-3036 Fax: 954-565-5557 www.chiropractorwiltonmanors.com Business Hours: Monday, Wednesday and Friday: 9:00am – 1:00pm and 3:00pm – 7:00pm Tuesday and Thursday: 9:00am – 1:00pm and 3:00pm – 6:00pm Weekends By Appointment 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE Emergency clients welcome Licensed Chiropractor #MM13657, Insured

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Reuters Life: Taking the workout to the back of the body


Mon, May 30 2011

By Dorene Internicola

NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) - Crunches, curls and sit-ups may be standard workout fare in gyms, basements and living rooms across the land.

But the authors of a new book suggest people get plenty of that movement in their daily lives. They say to get a really strong midsection the back of the body needs to be worked.

"Sitting at desks, working on computers, waiting in traffic, we are continually contracting our abs, throwing our shoulders forward and, ultimately, shutting down the back of the body, said Dr. Eric Goodman, co-author with Peter Park of "Foundation: Redefine Your Core, Conquer Back Pain, and Move with Confidence."

"If we're going to keep our posture and our spines strong, it has to be done by exercising the back of the body as the core of the body," explained Goodman, a chiropractor based in Santa Barbara, California.

The exercises illustrated in the book require no machines or equipment and take the spine as the body's center of stability. In the signature, or founder exercise, knees are bent over ankles, the body hinges from the hip joint, and movement originates in the pelvis, hips and hip joints.

"You're sticking your butt out on everything," explained Park, a trainer and owner of Platinum Fitness gyms, said. "We're aiming for the posterior chain."

Park is cycling great Lance Armstrong's strength and conditioning coach. The seven-time Tour de France winner wrote the forward for the book.

"Lance needed it more than anybody," Park said of the workout. "It opened him up. (With his) rounded back, rounded shoulders he almost looked funny off the bike."

The exercises are designed to augment, rather than replace, a regular fitness regime, Goodman said.

"We don't want people to stop doing yoga or Pilates. If you're currently doing cardio or other training just add foundation to it," Goodman said. "If you're doing it properly, 20 minutes is plenty. It's hard."

Neal Pire, spokesperson for the American College of Sports Medicine, said the concept of "hinging" or loading the posterior chain while maintaining neutral spine is mainstream, but he's never seen a book entirely devoted to it.

"Extension is key, because we do indeed live in a flexed state," he said, adding that if the public perception is that abs are the core, the public is mistaken.

"The core involves two sets of muscles: deep muscles whose roles are primarily stabilizing the spine, or more generally the trunk, and shallower muscles whose primary role is movement," Pire explained.

Goodman advocates a four-to-one ratio of back-to-front training.

"For every four exercises you do for the back of the body, you get to do one for the front. I think that's the opposite of what most people are doing."

Park said too many workouts reinforce sedentary postures.

"You see a guy who is sedentary all day go to the gym, do bench presses and ride on a bike. He's reinforcing what he did all day," said Park.

"We're trying to bring everyone back to the center, where they should be. I think this is the missing link."


To view this story on-line, go to:  http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/30/us-fitness-core-idUSTRE74T1I520110530?feedType=RSS&feedName=lifestyleMolt

Dr. Troy Lomasky of Coast Chiropractic has been recognized as one of Broward County and Fort Lauderdale's best, most experienced and most effective chiropractors.  He may be able to help eliminate your need for a disabled parking placard without medication or long waits at the doctor's office.  Contact Coast Chiropractic Injury and Wellness Center today at (954) 463-3036, or browse http://chiropractorwiltonmanors.com/wilton-manors-fl-chiropractic-services.htm for more information about Pain and Injury Care or Benefits Of Chiropractic Care.

CNN: World's 10 most exotic wellness retreats

World's 10 most exotic wellness retreats

By Anthea Gerrie, CNNGo.com
June 9, 2011 10:00 a.m. EDT


The Sha Wellness Clinic in a serene, macrobiotic retreat in Spain.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Some retreats can provide a medical overhaul while enjoying vacation time
The Sha wellness clinic is the world's only macrobiotic spa and a celebrity favorite
Other resorts cater to skin health and provide anti-aging remedies

RELATED TOPICS
Massage Therapy
Resorts and Spas
Travel Destinations
Spain

(CNNGo.com) -- Forget plain old spas, wellness is the buzzword now. Retreats that give you a medical overhaul while you sun, swim and scoff healthy gourmet fare.

Here are 10 of the best:

1. Terme de Saturnia Spa & Golf Resort

This Tuscan idyll probably has the world's most exotic facial treatments, using diamonds, gold and Antarctic ice as ingredients.

Also on offer are Craniosacral Attuning, Micronized Nasal Showers and Physiokinesiotherapy. It all sounds very technical, but the effects are pure bliss.

Experience exotic facial treatments at Terme de Saturnia Spa in Italy.

The spa sits beside an ancient thermal spring said to have healing powers, and is also awash in waterfalls, pools and impressive Roman baths. There are two restaurants, an 18-hole golf course and 53 treatment rooms.

Rate: Room and breakfast from €210 (US$302) per person per night, treatments extra.

58014 Saturnia (Grosetto), Italy; +39 0564 600888/9; http://www.termedisaturnia.it/it/

2. Sha Wellness Clinic

The world's only macrobiotic spa is a favorite of Kylie Minogue and Naomi Campbell.

Supremely serene, this white temple of minimalism brings an oriental style and philosophy to Spain's Costa Blanca. You'll be offered reiki -- a treatment which aims to balance your energies without the therapist actually laying hands on you -- and a session in a private "floatarium" -- a dimly lit room taken up by a shallow pool of salty water.

Despite the gourmet chef fresh from elBulli, expect a lot of brown rice and absolutely no meat, eggs or dairy.

Rate: Room and all meals from €200 (US$288) per person per night, treatments extra. Double that for a two-day package including access to classes and three treatments.

Verderol 5, El Albir, 03581 Alicante, Spain; +34 966 811 199; http://www.shawellnessclinic.com/

CNNGo: 28 of the most relaxing spas in Asia

3. Clinique La Prairie

Clinique La Prairie in Switzerland provides relaxing yoga-based massages.

This secretive clinic on the shores of Lake Geneva came to fame for its sheep embryo injections, said to have rejuvenated scores of the rich and famous.

Happily, the painful shots have been replaced by an extract which is now drunk after a comprehensive medical -- this must be the only spa in the world with 60 in-house specialists and its own MRI scanner.

Also expect out-there treatments like Lomi-Lomi, a Polynesian healing massage, and Sat Asanas, in which you're massaged while performing different yoga positions.

When not receiving treatments, you can walk round the lake or enjoy busy Montreux. The spa cuisine is superb.

Rate: Weekly programmes only, inclusive of six nights and full board, full medical check-up and a tailored program from CHF 10,370 (US$12,177) per person.

Chemin de la Prairie 2, 1815 Clarens, Switzerland; +41 21 989 3311; http://www.laprairie.ch/en

4. Como Shambhala Begawan Giri

Como Shambhala Begawan Giri has plenty of options, from mountain biking to meditation.

The flagship wellness retreat in central Bali has become a blueprint for a whole raft of Como properties. But it would be hard to beat this original, set among the rice paddies outside Ubud, where an osteopath, chiropractor, physio, psychologist, nutritionist and Ayurvedic doctor are all on hand to sort out your chakras.

Energy healers, life coaches and "influential thinkers" visit some weekends, but at all times there's yoga, pilates, meditation, aquatherapy, mountain biking and hiking, plus sublime spa treatments and outstanding cuisine.

Rate: Three-night minimum package including room and all meals, wellness consultation, massage, classes and return airport transfers from US$1,400 per person.

Banjar Begawan, Desa Melinggih Kelod, Payangan, Gianyar, Ubud 80571, Indonesia; +62 361 978 888; http://www.cse.como.bz/

CNNGo: 15 unusual places to spend a night

5. La Quinta

La Quinta specializes in rarefied spa treatments.

The desert resort of Palm Springs may not seem compatible with bone density scanning equipment used by NASA, but beautiful, colonial-style La Quinta has that gear and much more.

Rarefied spa treatments include a rose-quartz facial, a massage with "sacred stones," a body polish with the seeds of wine grapes from the Napa Valley and an oxygen "power lift" for the complexion. There's even a kids' spa -- where young athletes can get a sports massage -- golf and tennis, and 41 swimming pools.

Rate: Room rates start at US$109, room only. WellMax check-up including skin laser treatments as well as full diagnostic package US$3,500.

49-499 Eisenhower Drive, La Quinta, CA 92253, USA; +1 760 777 8772; http://www.wellmax.com/ / http://www.laquintaresort.com/

6. Carmel Forest Spa

Some of the world's best massage therapists are on staff at Carmel Forest Spa.

This eyrie high above the Med near Haifa was once a center of emotional healing for Holocaust survivors.

Now it tends to the aches, pains and stresses of their descendants. The world's best massage therapists deliver divine salt, vanilla and lavender peels or shiatsu. Reiki, physiotherapy and reflexology are all on tap.

A wine bar dispensing fine Israeli vintages distinguishes this place from most wellness centres, but in spite of the alcohol and abundant cuisine, the food is very healthy. And you can walk it off in the forest, on the tennis courts or with a swim in expansive indoor and outdoor pools.

Rate: Double rooms from US$435 including room, full board and activities, treatments extra.

PO Box 90 000, Haifa 31 900, Israel; +972 (04) 830 7888; http://www.isrotel.com/

CNNGo: Seoul's coolest luxury hotels

7. Carnac Thalasso @ Spa Resort Hotel

Thalassotherapy -- the harnessing of seawater and seaweed to improve health -- was invented more than a century ago in the westernmost French province of Brittany.

One of the best thalasso spas is at Carnac, with a huge indoor-outdoor seawater pool and new age waterbeds which beam out color therapy as they gently rock you.

Other treatments include wraps in warm seaweed, floats in a salty hydrotherapy bath, and massages delivered while tepid seawater drips on your back. Don't miss the passive but deeply therapeutic experience of staring out at sea and sky from a sybaritic relaxation room.

Rate: Double rooms from €85 (US$122) including access to therapeutic baths. Treatments extra.

6 Allee Fleur de Sel, 56343 Carnac, France; +33 (0)2 9752 5354; http://www.thalasso-carnac.com/

8. Blue Lagoon

This full-service indoor-outdoor spa is built atop the largest of the country's many natural hot springs, and lies conveniently halfway between the airport and the capital, Reykjavik.

Research shows bathing in geothermal seawater offers significant benefits to the skin as well as the psyche. You can slather on the rich mix of minerals, silica and algae provided in buckets along the sides of the huge outdoor pool, or get a professional massage, but there is also a clinic for psoriasis sufferers.

The Blue Lagoon has its own hotel, restaurant, superb shop and great line of skin care products; it's worth paying extra for access to the VIP club as a day visitor.

Rate: Double rooms including breakfast and Lagoon access from €140 (US$200); entrance-only €28.

240 GrindavĂ­k, Iceland; +354 420 8800; http://www.bluelagoon.com/

CNNGo: 5 spectacular volcanoes

9. Chiva Som

Chiva Som claims to offer a "total lifestyle transformation."

This exotic Thai resort offers a "total lifestyle transformation." After 16 years, Asia's first dedicated wellness resort is still winning multiple awards for its blend of Western diagnostics and Eastern philosophies served up in ritzy, but vernacular, style.

A new anti-aging doctor can ferret out triggers for disease and prescribe bio-identical hormones or herbal medicine. Also new are a biofeedback test to monitor response to stress, facial acupressure and a kinesthetic assessment to identify spine alignment imbalances.

But don't expect a guitar lesson if you sign up for a Heavy Metal Profile; it's a test to seek out lead, mercury and other toxins in your system.

Rate: Rooms from US$305 per night.

Hua Hin, Thailand; +66(0)32 536 536; http://www.chivasom.com/

10. Lifehouse

After half a century of health farms, Britain finally has its first true wellness retreat in Lifehouse. This contemporary, light-flooded spa set in gorgeous gardens once beloved of Queen Mary, offers traditional treatments like facials, pedicures and both western and eastern style massage.

You can get cranio-sacral therapy, acupuncture, personalized flower remedies, reiki, kinesiology, spiritual and psychic healing and even a virtual gastric band.

Food is healthy, innovative and excellent, there are yoga and exercises classes, and as with every great wellness spa, just hanging out in beautiful, tranquil surroundings is a major part of the experience.

Rate: Two-night package including all meals, transfers from railway station, access to classes and two treatments from £290 (US$474) per person.

Lifehouse, Frinton Road, Thorpe-le-Soken, Essex CO16 0JD; + 44 1255 863468;http://www.lifehouse.co.uk/



© 2011 Cable News Network Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. All Rights Reserved


Dr. Troy Lomasky of Coast Chiropractic has been recognized as one of Broward County and Fort Lauderdale's best, most experienced and most effective chiropractors.  He may be able to help eliminate your need for a disabled parking placard without medication or long waits at the doctor's office.  Contact Coast Chiropractic Injury and Wellness Center today at (954) 463-3036, or browse http://chiropractorwiltonmanors.com/wilton-manors-fl-chiropractic-services.htm for more information about Pain and Injury Care or Benefits Of Chiropractic Care.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

New Port Richey Chiropractor Rides Horse To Work As Alternative To High Gas Prices (With Video)

In protest of gas prices, women ride horses to work
May 23, 2011
Written by Laura Kadechka
From Tampa Bay News Channel 10 WTSP.com

COMMUNITIES
New Port Richey-Port Richey-Hudson






New Port Richey, Florida -- Cara Hacht and Jane Mundy are fed up with paying too much for gas, so they're protesting.

Once a month, the women say they'll be trading in their car keys for a one horse power ride to work - their horses Maya and Black Hawk.

"Since I'm a chiropractor, we do alternative care of medicine, so we thought why not do an alternative way to get to work?" said Hacht, who practices in New Port Richey.

On Monday, the women met at Mundy's Hudson home, where they keep the horses, and saddled up for the 5-mile ride into work. A normal commute would take a matter of minutes, but Monday's trot in took closer to an hour.

There were pit stops along the way, including a trot through the bank drive-thru to make a deposit. Then there was a quick stop at the local feed store for a snack for Maya and Black Hawk.

There was no stopping at the neighborhood gas station, although it sparked a lot of conversation.

"They rode up and I was shocked, I was surprised," said Joe Zolton.

When the women told them why they were on horseback, he had to laugh.

"It's going to get a lot of attention, I guarantee that," he said.

That's the whole point of the ride. The women are hoping to encourage others to consider changing how they commute to work each morning.

"We would encourage everyone to ride your horse, ride your bike, walk or car pool," said Hacht.

The women say they checked with law enforcement to make sure they were even allowed to make the 5-mile trek to work via horseback and got the seal of approval, as long as they did not disrupt traffic.

"They're allowed to be along the shoulder of the edge, roadway edge," said Sgt. Steve Gaskins with the Florida Highway Patrol. "They're entitled to it just like pedestrians would be."

While state law does not forbid someone from riding their horse to work, there are limits. Sgt. Gaskins says horses are not allowed on limited access roads like the interstate and toll roads like the Crosstown Expressway.

We called law enforcement agencies across the Bay area and it turns out you can ride your horse to work as long as you abide by local traffic laws and not disrupt traffic.

But, there's also something riders must be mindful of - manure.

"Please be courteous and pick up after the horse," said Sgt. Gaskins.

That doesn't seem to be a problem for Hacht who said it's great fertilizer. "We've even had a couple of patients say, 'Pease bag it up for us and we'll pick it up the next time we're coming to see you.'

The women are an exception to most of us because they have a place to "park" the horses in a makeshift stall behind their office.

They say they plan to be out riding again next month, again as a reminder to drivers that there are other ways to commute and save.

Broward Chiropractor Troy Lomasky of Coast Chiropractic Notes Sacramento Bee Article On Summertime Gardening-Related Increase in Lower Back Pain

Slideshow
previous next
Above:  First lady Michelle Obama uses the White House garden to demonstrate how such activity combines exercise with good nutrition.  (Photo Credit:  Olivier Douliery / MCT)

Garden workout shouldn't be a pain

By Debbie Arrington
darrington@sacbee.com


Published: Saturday, Jun. 4, 2011


Every spring, Dr. Jeri Anderson sees the same signs: back pain, achy knees, and sore necks and shoulders.

"We see more acute lower-back pain this time of year than any other," said the Sacramento chiropractor. "Mondays are especially busy. When the weather first starts getting nice, it's unbelievable what people will do to themselves in a weekend. They look like a train wreck."

Gardening – as we're reminded by sources ranging from first lady Michelle Obama to Weight Watchers – is indeed exercise. Such activities as raking leaves or pulling weeds can burn as many calories as golf or bicycling.

This common-sense push has become almost a movement, advocated by state garden clubs nationwide. June 6 is National Gardening Exercise Day.

Obama uses the White House vegetable garden – which produced more than 2,000 pounds of vegetables last year – to demonstrate how such activity combines exercise with good nutrition, fighting obesity for all ages. She recently announced that she's writing a gardening book keyed to her "Let's Move!" campaign to improve children's health through outdoor exercise and fresh food.

"We wanted to share the story with the rest of the nation and perhaps with the rest of the world," she told the Associated Press. "We get so many questions about the garden: How did we do it? Why did we do it? How do I do this in my own home or community?"

Weight Watchers, in its revamped diet stressing vegetables and fruit, also suggests gardening as great exercise. No trip to the gym necessary.

George Ball, chairman of mail-order giant Burpee, suggests gardening as the perfect blend of exercise and stress relief. In a recent survey of customers, Burpee found that gardeners equated the benefits of gardening with many of the most common New Year's resolutions: losing weight, getting more exercise and making healthful food choices for the family.

Among the survey findings: 79 percent said America could lose weight and fight obesity if more people grew their own vegetables.

But many gardeners and weekend warriors dive into projects without any regard to the toll it will take on their bodies. This Memorial Day weekend will be especially busy.

That's where those aches and pains come in.

"You wouldn't just go to the gym to work out – squat, twist, bend, lift – for hours and expect to feel OK afterward," Anderson said. "So why do we think we can do that in our gardens? We need to think of gardening as exercise and approach it in the same manner."

Gardening exercise guru Jeffrey Restuccio is author of "Get Fit Through Gardening: Advice, Tips and Tools for Better Health" (Hatherleigh Press, $15.95, 168 pages). For more than 20 years, he's been working on an aerobics approach to gardening, using moves he borrowed from martial arts.

"It's an incredibly great idea, teaching gardening as exercise," he said. "It could have a real impact in people's lives."

Restuccio, who lives near Memphis, Tenn., developed aerobics-style moves for routine chores such as raking. (Watch them online at http://www.getfitthroughgarden-ing.com/.)

"When I started gardening, I liked the physicality," Restuccio said. "I had been involved for years in exercise, weightlifting and martial arts. I found gardening not only therapeutic, but inherently physical, especially organic gardening. … You have an exercise gym in your own backyard."

Like most beginning gardeners, Restuccio also found that some aches and pains came along with his new love of gardening.

"But by changing tools and analyzing movement, I was able to overcome that," he added. "My method takes considerable time and training, lots of practice. Your goal is to develop fluid motions like tai chi, only you have a tool in your hand."

Several of Restuccio's ideas can help gardeners spare themselves aches and pain, as well as get fit.

"Long-handled tools make all the difference," he said. "It transfers the stress from your weakest muscles – your lower back – to your strongest muscles, in your lower legs."

Restuccio suggested 5- to 6-foot handles on rakes; 18 to 20 inches on hand tools such as trowels. He uses PVC pipe to lengthen handles when necessary.

"The longer handle allows you to use your legs to scoot the rake instead of push with your arms," he said. "It's a quantum difference."

He also stressed the importance of ergonomic tools such as pruners to save stress on hands and wrists.

Another tip: Change hands and directions often. "That way you're not always using the same muscles," Restuccio said. "You're balancing your exercise routine."

Restuccio gardens to music. Every time the song changes, he switches sides or hands with his tools.

"It feels funny at first," he added, "but now I do it instinctively."

Anderson, an avid gardener, tries to take her own advice. She recently moved to a home with a bigger yard closer to her work at Capitol Chiropractic. She's taking her new garden's renovation one step at a time.

"I love to garden," she said. "At my old home, I had beautiful raised beds and grew fresh vegetables year-round. Now I'm getting ready to put in new beds. It's so healthy to pick something out of your garden. It's good for your soul to be digging in the soil.

"It's good for your body, too," she added. "You need to get out and get some exercise, 30 minutes a day. It's good stress relief."

Weekend warriors get wounded by trying to do too much too soon.

"Most people approach gardening with some Herculean effort," Anderson said. "They expect to re- landscape their yard in a day. That's unrealistic."

Instead, take it one step at a time. Anderson, for example, plans to level the site for her garden beds one day, haul in the lumber another, then fill the beds with soil on yet another.

"It's a process, not overnight," she said of creating her new garden. "Exercise is that way, too."

Just as gardens benefit from advance planning, so does garden exercise.

"Biggest thing: Prepare ahead of time," Anderson said. "You don't want to hear this now, but you should have been doing squats and lunges during the winter to bring some level of fitness to the table, so when you go outside to work, it's not an absolute insult to your system."


HEALTHY GARDENING
Here are some tips from experts on how to spare yourself aches and pains when gardening:

1. Stretch and warm up before you start work in the garden. Take 15 minutes for a short walk. Stretch your hamstrings, arms and back; that will help prevent injury and soreness.

2. Start easy and work up. Limit your activity to 30 minutes, then gradually add time each day. "Just as you don't expect to run a marathon on the first day, don't expect to do every garden chore in one day either," said Sacramento chiropractor and gardener Jeri Anderson.

3. Mix it up. Instead of all digging, raking or mowing, mix your activities to balance your muscle activity.

4. Take little breaks often – every 20 minutes, rest for five. That helps your muscles cope.

5. Lift with your legs, not your back. That old saying is very true, especially when hauling around large bags of compost or potting mix. Also, let your legs do the work instead of your arms.

6. Stand up straight; it relieves pressure on your back. When kneeling, use a pad to cushion your knees. Don't bend from the back when weeding, hoeing or raking, said gardening exercise expert Jeffrey Restuccio. Instead, bend from the knees and use your legs, shoulders and arms in a rocking motion.

7. Stay hydrated. Drink lots of water. For example, a 200-pound person should drink 100 ounces a day. "And more when you're sweating," Anderson said.

8. Cool down when you're done. Take another short walk. Pick some flowers. Remember to stretch for 10 minutes after your chores, too. Your muscles will thank you.

– Debbie Arrington


GARDEN HEALTH AND SAFETY REMINDERS

• Before starting any exercise program (including gardening), consult your doctor.

• Be kind to your hands. Avoid strains and blisters by limiting your time at one activity such as digging or pruning.

• Wear gloves. They protect your hands, especially when you work with thorny or prickly plants.

• Beware of bugs. Spiders can hide under pots; wasps can nest in the ground.

• Wear a hat and sunscreen. Sun exposure can cause skin cancer; avoid the burn.

• Get a tetanus shot. The bacteria that cause this painful condition can lurk on thorns and prickles.

• Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, a.k.a. MRSA, also has been linked to gardening. This bacteria can enter the body through small cuts. Another reason to wear gloves.

• Have a first-aid kit on hand for emergencies. Bumps, bruises and blisters happen.

• If you have allergies, talk to your doctor. You may be more comfortable with medication – and certain plants that aren't offensive to your nose.

– Debbie Arrington


THINK OF GARDEN CHORES AS EXERCISE



According to Weight Watchers International, a recent university study compared the amount of energy expended during a number of activities, including gardening. Some typical gardening activities used as much as other traditional forms of exercise.


DOING THIS ... USES AS MUCH ENERGY AS



Watering the lawn or garden - Sitting, knitting or sewing

Walking, applying fertilizer to a lawn or seeding a lawn - Walking while shopping

Trimming shrubs or trees with a power cutter - Walking at a moderate pace

Raking; planting seeds and shrubs - Leisurely bicycling

Weeding; cultivating; trimming shrubs and trees - Golf

Carrying, stacking and hauling branches - Playing softball or baseball

Mowing the lawn with a hand mower - Aerobics or swimming



© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.



Read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/05/28/3651694/garden-workout-shouldnt-be-a-pain.html#ixzz1OQoShyuJ

South Florida Gay News Notes Dr. Troy Lomasky of Wilton Manors is "Best Chiropractor In Town"

SFGN Profile: Dr. Troy Lomasky Adjusting Lives for Over 20 Years

Dr. Troy Lomaski
Above:  Coast Chiropractic's Dr. Troy Lomasky Is Known as One of the Most Highly Effective Chiropractors in Broward County and South Florida



Dr. Troy Lomasky has become a Wilton Manors mainstay. Over the past decade, he has earned a reputation for being the best chiropractor in town.

The Brooklyn, New York, native began his career as a chiropractic physician nearly 20 years ago when he interned for the Joseph brothers’ practice in Plantation. Impressed with his work, the brothers asked Lomasky to head up a new office. Soon after, he opened his own practice, Coast Chiropractic Injury and Wellness Center on Sunrise Boulevard in Fort Lauderdale, where he remained for 10 years.

So what brought Lomasky to Wilton Manors?

“I was looking for a new location and a realtor friend of mine suggested I take a look at this building,” he says. Years later, he still operates out of the same location.

Lomasky credits his growth and success as a respected physician to treating each patient with dignity and respect. “I treat each patient the way I wanted to be treated, like family” says Lomasky. “I don’t invite all of them over to my house for a BBQ, but I make them feel at home when they visit my office.”

A thorough consultation, physical exam, and x-rays are given to each patient by Lomasky in order to specifically diagnose the patient’s problem and to make certain they are placed on the appropriate treatment plan. “We utilize the most up-to-date techniques to ensure patient comfort and responsiveness,” he says. In order to provide a multidisciplinary approach to healthcare, Lomasky works closely with other local providers.

Some of the most popular services offered by Coast Chiropractic include nutritional counseling, diet and weight-loss counseling, spinal decompression therapy, massage therapy and spinal adjustments.

“The spinal adjustment removes pressure on your nerves and rebalances your body structure. It's a very powerful procedure,” he says. The moment a chiropractor implements an adjustment, hundreds of bodily functions and activities are affected, including the flow of nerve impulses over the spinal cord. “There’s nothing better for a person’s overall health and well-being than an adjustment. It can increase a person’s range of motion as well.”

Now for a brief medical lesson: The body is always trying to re-align or adjust your spine. The back muscles are continuously working to pull the vertebra back to where it belongs. A chiropractor doesn't actually put the vertebra back into place, but supplies the little bit of force needed to free the vertebra so that the body will re-align itself.

Whether you need an adjustment or suffer from back pain as a result of an injury, Lomasky and his team always make you feel welcomed.

For more information on Dr. Troy Lomasky and Coast Chiropractic, visit Coast-chiropractic.com.

Broward County Florida Chiropractor Dr. Troy Lomasky, Notes LA Times Report on Disabled Parking Placard Crackdown Trend

The L.A. Times reported on May 22, 2011:


Fraudulent use of disabled parking placards explodes in last decade

With the state and municipalities in financial crisis, the California Department of Motor Vehicles is cracking down on placard fraud. The issue strikes at the nexus of parking angst, civic revenues and righteous indignation.



Above:  David Wisansky, an investigator with the California Department of Motor Vehicles, speaks with Magdalene Osherenko as he confiscates her disabled parking placard during a sting operation along Camden Drive in Beverly Hills. "I think it's not fair what you're doing," she told him. (Al Seib, Los Angeles Times / May 22, 2011)



By Martha Groves, Los Angeles Times

May 22, 2011


In Beverly Hills, a DMV agent confiscates a disabled parking placard from a woman leaving a fitness center.

In downtown Los Angeles, a motorist launches into a rant about "evil" meter readers after acknowledging that he's using someone else's disabled parking pass.

And in neighborhoods near UCLA, 17 students are stopped and questioned as they scurry to class, their cars parked in restricted zones, disabled parking badges dangling from their rear-view mirrors.

Fraudulent use of disabled parking placards — those blue or red badges that allow motorists to park for free or in specially reserved spaces — has exploded in the last decade, according to state motor vehicle officials. With 1 in 10 California drivers now legally registered to carry the passes, transportation experts say abuse has become commonplace. At any given moment, on any given street, more than a third of the vehicles displaying the tags — and parking without paying — are doing so illegally, say officials with the California Department of Motor Vehicles.

Now, with the state and municipalities in financial crisis, the DMV is cracking down on placard fraud. In a series of sting operations, DMV investigators have targeted malingering motorists in such high-volume parking districts as Beverly Hills' Golden Triangle, downtown's Fashion District and Westwood. With more stings planned, they could be coming soon to a street near you.

The issue strikes at the nexus of parking angst, civic revenues and righteous indignation. With many cities adopting high-tech meters and demand-based pricing, abuse of disabled placards translates into millions of dollars in lost parking revenues and increased traffic congestion as paying motorists are forced to cruise streets looking for open spaces, officials say.

"It's unbelievable how many people do it," grumbled one passer-by in Beverly Hills, who praised a recent DMV sting operation. "I find it a little galling."

Under California law, as in most states, cars displaying a disabled placard may park for free for an unlimited time at metered spaces. The placard holder does not have to own or drive the vehicle, but if a relative or friend is using the placard to secure free, unlimited parking, then the placard holder must accompany that person or be within "reasonable proximity."

The law was intended to make it more convenient for individuals with missing or paralyzed extremities, impaired vision or heart, circulatory or lung disease to park conveniently and for as long as necessary to visit doctors or run errands. A disabled placard may be prescribed by, among others, a medical doctor, a nurse practitioner, a certified nurse midwife, a physician's assistant, a chiropractor or an optometrist.

But with metered spaces now costing as much as $4 an hour, the temptation to misuse a friend's or relative's placard — even a dead one's — can be great.

"It does sort of invite this corruption and is a disservice to other motorists," said Michael Manville, a UCLA researcher who has studied the problem.

Although some abusers might be ignorant of the law governing placard use, many seem all too aware and willing to flout it.

The reactions of drivers can be telling, investigators say. Magdalene Osherenko, a driver cited during the recent sting in Beverly Hills, became agitated and tried to grab a placard registered to her mother from the DMV investigator who had confiscated it. "I think it's not fair what you're doing," she told investigators. "You're in Beverly Hills. I'm going to take this up with the Beverly Hills Police Department."

"We're state of California," Officer David Wisansky told her.

Another driver cited by DMV investigators in Beverly Hills had just emerged from a Camden Drive fitness center to her expired meter. She told officers that she had earlier dropped her mother at a doctor's office, and her mother confirmed that via cellphone. Nonetheless, an investigator confiscated the placard, saying the woman had "personally garnered a benefit" by using it to park for free while she exercised.

Abuse of disabled placards is not a new phenomenon. Perhaps the most infamous local case dates to 1999, when several members of the UCLA football team pleaded guilty to obtaining disabled parking passes by fabricating the names of physicians. The incident even prompted the university to establish an abuse hotline.

What is new, however, is the proliferation of disabled placards.

California, which has 24 million licensed drivers, will issue 2.1 million permanent placards this year, up from 1.2 million a decade ago. In Los Angeles County, about 621,000 of nearly 6 million licensed drivers have placards.

"The city of Los Angeles has six legal placards for every single city meter," said Jonathan Williams, a transportation planner in Seattle who as a graduate student at UCLA researched the effect of legal disabled placards on city parking programs.

Williams said questionable medical practices undoubtedly contribute to the problem. Under privacy laws, the DMV may not ask a motorist why he or she has a placard. When enforcement officials in Maryland attempted to investigate doctors' prescriptions for placards, Williams said, they "were met with a fierce response from the medical community."

In California, discussions about changing the vehicle code haven't gotten far because of resistance from advocacy groups. "I don't want us in our zeal to put something in place that's going to screw over [disabled] people," said Margaret Johnson, advocacy director for Disability Rights California in Sacramento.

With misuse on the rise, said Vito Scattaglia, deputy chief of the division of investigations at the DMV, the agency is planning a statewide placard enforcement day this spring.

"We need a deterrent," he said.

martha.groves@latimes.com



Dr. Troy Lomasky of Coast Chiropractic has been recognized as one of Broward County and Fort Lauderdale's best, most experienced and most effective chiropractors.  He may be able to help eliminate your need for a disabled parking placard without medication or long waits at the doctor's office.  Contact Coast Chiropractic Injury and Wellness Center today at (954) 463-3036, or browse http://chiropractorwiltonmanors.com/wilton-manors-fl-chiropractic-services.htm for more information about Pain and Injury Care or Benefits Of Chiropractic Care.

Broward Chiropractor Troy Lomasky Notes Star Chicago Cubs Pitcher Carlos Zambrano Consults His Chiropractor Before Game

Stiff neck shouldn't keep Zambrano from Tuesday start

That's when Cubs pitcher hopes to extend hitting streak to 5 — at-bats




Above:  Carlos Zambrano counseled with his chiropractor before a big game in May 2011. (Phil Velasquez, Chicago Tribune / May 27, 2011)



By Dave van Dyck, Tribune reporter

7:14 p.m. CDT, May 27, 2011


Just count it as another wacky chapter in the burgeoning book about the life and times of Carlos Zambrano.

Previous chapters have dealt with cramps in the forearm from late-night computer chats with friends and relatives in Venezuela, cramps in his pitching hand from too much caffeine, back spasms because of "being lazy" and a suspension for temper problems.

Zambrano said his latest problem — a stiff neck — was from sleeping wrong and watching late-night television in bed.

"I watch TV with my head on the pillow and the chiropractor told me to sit on my back and not my shoulder," Zambrano said Friday, one day after his latest visit to a doctor.

The stiff neck, in his trapezoid muscle, didn't prevent Zambrano from pitching six innings during a 9-3 victory Thursday over the Mets. Even manager Mike Quade said he didn't know about the problem until after the game.

"I have a little knot," he said. "With treatment it will go away. Sometimes it doesn't bother me. It's nothing to worry about."

Zambrano is expected to make his next scheduled start Tuesday, when he hopes to extend his hitting streak beyond four straight at-bats.

According to Elias News Bureau, Thursday was the eighth game in which Zambrano recorded three or more hits and was the winning pitcher, the highest total since Bob Gibson retired in 1975 with eight such victories.

He also has the most such victories in modern Cubs history (since 1900), with two more than Grover Alexander and Mordecai Brown. And he has three more than Babe Ruth, who posted a 94-46 record but had three or more hits in only five of his victories.

Asked about his recent hitting prowess, Zambrano asked: "Are you surprised about that?"

But why such success?

"Because I guess right," he replied. "Sometimes you have to guess and wait for one pitch."


Dr. Troy Lomasky of Coast Chiropractic has been recognized by local media as one of Broward County and Fort Lauderdale's best, most experienced and most effective chiropractors.  He can treat athletes' stiff necks quickly and easily without medication or long waits at the doctor's office.  Contact Coast Chiropractic Injury and Wellness Center today at (954) 463-3036, or browse http://chiropractorwiltonmanors.com/wilton-manors-fl-chiropractic-services.htm for more information about Pain and Injury Care or Benefits Of Chiropractic Care.