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Disc Pressure, Research, and Why Not All Tables Are Created Equal: FAQs

BY: Dr. David Kaff, DC
POSTED September 23, 2025 IN
General

Disc Pressure, Research, and Why Not All Tables Are Created Equal: FAQs

If you’ve been researching spinal decompression, you’ve probably noticed a lot of conflicting claims. Some clinics promote “decompression” that’s really just traction, while others use advanced systems like the DRX9000 that are backed by research. Patients also ask whether inversion tables can provide the same results.

To clear up the confusion, we’ve compiled the most common questions patients ask about disc pressure, decompression research, and why not all tables are created equal.


Why does disc pressure matter for my back health?

Your spinal discs act like cushions between the bones of your spine. They’re always under pressure—lowest when lying down (~25 mmHg), higher when standing (~100 mmHg), and highest when sitting (~125–150 mmHg).

When a disc is herniated or degenerating, these pressures push material outward into nerves, creating pain, numbness, or weakness. Lowering that pressure is the key to disc healing.


How does true spinal decompression reduce disc pressure?

Research shows that advanced systems like the DRX9000 can lower intradiscal pressure into the negative range (–100 to –160 mmHg). This vacuum effect helps retract herniated material, rehydrate the disc, and promote structural healing—not just temporary pain relief.


What makes the DRX9000 different from other decompression or traction tables?

The DRX9000 uses a logarithmic pull curve that adjusts 13 times per second to prevent muscle guarding. Unlike “me too” tables, it has published research showing:

  • True negative disc pressure

  • Disc height restoration

  • MRI-verified herniation shrinkage

Other tables may look similar, but they don’t create the same healing environment.


Can’t I just use an inversion table at home?

Inversion tables may temporarily reduce pressure but never below zero. Even upside down, intradiscal pressure stays around 25–40 mmHg—so there’s no vacuum effect to pull herniations back in.

Inversion may help some people feel looser, but the relief is short-lived and it’s not safe for everyone (especially patients with glaucoma, heart conditions, or high blood pressure).


Are there studies proving decompression works?

Yes. Published research and imaging studies show:

  • Disc height increases of 1–1.6 mm

  • Spinal canal space widening up to 2 mm

  • Pain improvements averaging 80%

  • Herniation regression, with some discs fully resolving

This makes decompression more than symptom relief—it’s measurable, structural healing.


Why do some studies say traction and decompression are the same?

Most of those studies had limitations:

  • Too few sessions (10–15 instead of the 20–30 needed for real change)

  • Mixed patient groups (general back pain instead of herniated disc cases)

  • Limited outcomes (pain scores only, without MRI follow-up)

When done properly, decompression consistently outperforms traction.


How many sessions are usually needed?

Most patients require 20–30 decompression sessions over several weeks. This allows the discs to heal structurally and provides lasting improvement, rather than just temporary relief.


Is spinal decompression safe?

Yes. The DRX9000 is FDA-cleared, non-invasive, and comfortable. Because the pull is computer-controlled and constantly adjusting, it avoids the sudden tugs that can trigger muscle guarding. Most patients find the sessions relaxing.


Bottom line: What should patients know?

Everyday life loads your discs with constant pressure. Only true spinal decompression systems like the DRX9000 can reverse that pressure into the negative range, creating an environment proven to retract herniations and restore disc health.

Other tables or inversion devices may stretch your back, but they don’t heal discs. If you want lasting results—not just temporary relief—choose true spinal decompression.


Ready to Find Out If Decompression Can Help You?

If you’re struggling with a herniated disc, sciatica, or chronic back pain, don’t settle for temporary relief. Call Frisco Spinal Rehab today at 972-712-7744 to schedule your consultation.

dkaff
Dr. David Kaff is the Clinic Director at Frisco Spinal Rehab in Frisco, Texas. With over 25 years of clinical experience, he specializes in advanced non-surgical solutions for spine and joint conditions, including the DRX9000 True Spinal Decompression system, red-light therapy, PEMF, shockwave, and chiropractic care. Dr. Kaff is dedicated to helping patients with herniated discs, sciatica, spinal stenosis, and chronic pain find long-term relief through innovative, evidence-based treatments. His clinic combines state-of-the-art technology with a compassionate, patient-focused approach to achieve lasting results.

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