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Here’s a fun little secret from the world of spinal decompression:

Two patients can lie on the exact same table…
with the exact same diagnosis…
And walk out with completely different results.

Why?

Because one tiny, almost laughably overlooked detail makes all the difference:

The angle of the pull.

Yep. Not the fancy machine. Not the soothing music. Not even the “luxury chiropractic experience.”

It’s the angle.


Decompression Isn’t “Stretch and Pray”

Let’s clear something up.

Old-school traction is basically the spinal equivalent of grabbing a stuck drawer and yanking on it until something happens. It pulls straight, it pulls hard, and it hopes for the best.

Modern spinal decompression is supposed to be smarter.

The goal isn’t just to stretch your spine like a piece of taffy—it’s to create targeted negative pressure at one specific disc, so the bulging material moves back where it belongs and stops irritating the nerve.

That’s precision work.

And the angle of pull is the steering wheel.


Your Spine Isn’t a 2×4

Here’s where things go sideways (sometimes literally).

Your lumbar spine isn’t straight. It’s curved, layered, and a little bit dramatic. Each disc sits at its own angle, like a row of slightly crooked books on a shelf.

So when you change the angle of traction—even by a few degrees—you change which disc gets the force.

👉 Wrong angle?
👉 Wrong disc.

You might be decompressing L4-L5 while the real problem is L5-S1. That’s like watering your neighbor’s lawn and wondering why yours is still brown.

Then the patient says, “Decompression didn’t work.”

No… it just never hit the target.


Plot Twist: Discs Don’t All Misbehave the Same Way

Now let’s make this even more interesting.

When a disc herniates, it doesn’t politely stay put. It migrates. Sometimes up. Sometimes down. Occasionally like it’s trying to escape the building.

And this matters—a lot.

Because the angle that works for one direction doesn’t work for the other.

Here’s the simplified version:

·         If the disc material has moved downward (caudal migration) → a more neutral angle (around 0°) tends to work best

·         If it’s moved upward (cranial migration) → a slight flexion angle (around 12.5°) is more effective

This isn’t guesswork. It’s geometry.

It’s like fishing—you don’t cast behind you and expect to catch something in front of you.


“We Have a Decompression Table” Is Not a Flex

A lot of clinics proudly say:

“We offer spinal decompression!”

Which is great… in the same way as saying “I own a treadmill” makes you an Olympic runner.

The machine is the easy part.

The hard part is:

·         Reading the MRI

·         Identifying the exact disc level

·         Understanding the direction of migration

·         Setting the correct angle and force

That’s where results actually come from.

Otherwise, you’re just stretching people and hoping their spine cooperates out of politeness.


The Oscillation Thing (AKA Why Constant Pulling Fails)

Now let’s talk about another overlooked detail: how the force is applied.

If you pull on the spine constantly, the body does what bodies do—it fights back.

Muscles tighten. Guarding kicks in. Your spine basically says, “No thanks, I’ll stay right where I am.”

That’s why effective decompression uses oscillation—a controlled pull-and-release pattern.

Think of it as coaxing rather than forcing.

That rhythm allows the muscles to relax, which is when the real magic happens:
👉 Negative pressure forms
👉 The disc actually decompresses
👉 Things start moving in the right direction


The Takeaway (With a Little Tough Love)

If the angle is wrong…
If the level isn’t targeted…
If the oscillation isn’t right…

You’re not doing decompression.

You’re just… stretching.

And while stretching is lovely (yoga would like a word), it’s not the same as precisely correcting a disc problem.


Final Thought

Spinal decompression isn’t a “one-setting-fits-all” treatment.

It’s more like a combination lock:

·         Right angle

·         Right level

·         Right direction

·         Right force pattern

Get all of those lined up—and now you’re actually treating the problem.

Miss even one?

Well… enjoy your very expensive stretch.


If you’re a patient, this is the question to ask:
“How are you determining the angle for my specific disc?”

If the answer sounds like guessing…

You already know the problem.

Call us today at 617-720-1992 to see if we can help with your disc herniation, spinal stenosis, or other back problem

This article is based on the blog article Why Table Angle Matters in Spinal Decompression by Dudem Chiropractic, published on June 26, 2026