Tags: bc injury law, Madsen v. Bekker, Mr. Justice Truscott,
sacroiliac joint injury, SI Joint Injury Posted in ICBC Back Injury (soft tissue) Cases, ICBC Soft Tissue Injury Cases, Uncategorized Direct Link Comments Off top ^
For other recent BC Caselaw dealing with non-pecuniary damages for
sacroiliac joint injuries you can click here to access my archived posts.
Not exact matches
X-rays may show changes of cartilage or bone
injury indicative of arthritis of the spine,
sacroiliac joints, and / or
joints of the hands.
The
sacroiliac joint can get really beaten up in some people, leading to pain and
injury.
New Zealand yoga teacher Donna Farhi notes that in her travels around the world, she's found that dysfunction in the
sacroiliac joint (SI
joint)-- the meeting of the two posterior surfaces of the pelvis with the sacrum, the triangular - shaped bone at the base of the spine — has become the most common
injury among female yoga practitioners.
Other common causes are: spine degeneration, facet
joint injuries, piriformis syndrome, spinal stenosis, spondylolisthesis, and
sacroiliac dysfunction You're most likely to get sciatica when you're 30 to 50 years old.
A
sacroiliac dislocation is a severe
injury to the pelvis in which the
joint that typically connects the pelvis onto the spine is torn loose and moves out of place.
A
sacroiliac dislocation is a severe
injury to the pelvis in which the
joint that typically connects...
154] I accept the opinion of Dr. McGraw that the plaintiff sustained a strain of his left
sacroiliac joint and I reject the opinion of Dr. Watt that it was rather a soft tissue
injury to his left iliopsoas muscle and his left piriformis muscle.
[165] I am satisfied from all the evidence that the plaintiff's effort to become more fit through his own exercise routines is working sufficiently to resolve the strain in his left
sacroiliac joint and any related low back soft tissue
injury.
I accept his medical finding that the plaintiff suffered a fracture of the tranverse processes at L3 and L4, an
injury to the
sacroiliac joint and that formerly asymptomatic disc bulges and protrusions became symptomatic as a result of his
injuries.
He suffered various
injuries the most serious of which was a strain to his
sacroiliac joint.
[159] I am prepared to accept some present minor low back
injury related to a strain of the left
sacroiliac joint causing mild pain at times of prolonged lifting, bending or crouching but I also do not consider that this pain has been disabling to any of the plaintiff's activities at all...