What is a Physiatrist? What
a Physiatrist is not, is a Psychiatrist, very important specialist, but a
very different one...
A Physiatrist (fizz ee at' trist) is a physician
specializing in physical medicine and rehabilitation. Physiatrists treat a
wide range of problems from sore shoulders to spinal cord injuries. They
see patients in all age groups and treat problems that touch upon all the
major systems in the body. These specialists focus on restoring function
to people.
Physiatrists focus on restoring function.
Allowing us to function at our best in our jobs, with our
families and in our recreation. They care for patients with acute and
chronic pain, and musculoskeletal problems like back and neck pain,
tendonitis, pinched nerves and fibromyalgia. They also treat people who
have experienced catastrophic events resulting in paraplegia,
quadriplegia, or traumatic brain injury; and individuals who have had
strokes, orthopedic injuries, or neurologic disorders such as multiple
sclerosis, polio, or ALS.
Physiatrists treat acute and chronic pain
and musculoskeletal disorders. They may see a person who lifts a heavy
object at work and experiences back pain, a basketball player who sprains
an ankle and needs rehabilitation to play again, or a knitter who has
carpal tunnel syndrome. Physiatrists' patients include people with
arthritis, tendonitis, any kind of back pain, and work- or sports-related
injuries.
Physiatrists also treat serious disorders of
the musculoskeletal system that result in severe functional limitations.
They would treat a baby with a birth defect, someone in a bad car
accident, or an elderly person with a broken hip. Physiatrists coordinate
the long-term rehabilitation process for patients with spinal cord
injuries, cancer, stroke or other neurological disorders, brain injuries,
amputations, and multiple sclerosis.