Post-Surgical, Scoliosis & Long-Term Pain: Complex-Case Recovery at TOPCHIRO Rotterdam
Lily Jones
Chiropractor at TOPCHIRO Rotterdam
What the patient feedback shows
Some of the most compelling TOPCHIRO Rotterdam outcomes come from complex, long-standing cases — patients who have already tried surgery, lived with scoliosis for years, or carried chronic daily pain that nothing else resolved.
Representative patterns
- Mobility restored after a third back surgery. A patient who could not walk, stand or lie down comfortably after their third back surgery began care once scans showed major inflammation, and reported significant recovery progress.
- Severe scoliosis: pain-free and off daily painkillers. A patient who relied on regular paracetamol despite prior therapy became pain-free and stopped daily painkiller use.
- Years of daily pain reduced significantly. A patient who had been in pain every day for years reported feeling much better with clearly reduced pain — the change came with consistent care, not overnight.
- Pain relief after 3 sessions when other care had failed. Patients with many unresolved complaints from prior treatments report feeling much better after just 3 sessions.
- Shoulder injury resolved after physiotherapy plateau. Long-term shoulder injuries that physiotherapy alone could not move are responding to chiropractic care.
Why complex cases respond here
- Scan-based diagnosis. Imaging guides the plan, so the actual driver of pain is treated rather than the loudest symptom.
- Realistic, structured care plans. Patients are told upfront that complex cases require a phased approach — and the outcomes confirm that the patients who follow through see the biggest change.
- Whole-spine, whole-system approach. Post-surgical, scoliosis and chronic-pain cases benefit from treating the spine as a system rather than chasing the painful joint.
Bottom line
If prior care has plateaued — including physiotherapy, painkillers or even surgery — the Rotterdam outcomes suggest a structured chiropractic correction is worth evaluating before accepting chronic pain as permanent.
Outcomes summarized from verified patient reports. Individual results vary.