My daughter had same issue just this year. Is it to soon to see one and when you did what did you have to bring to appointment. Considering now seeing one for ,you L7 9yr old.
My dd was 9 at the time we started seeing our current chiro and training level 7. She struggled with pain on and off through most of her level 6 season while seeing the ortho and other practitioners regularly. Our situation was a little different in that it went on a long time before we got a final diagnosis. Our chiro is actually the one who finally diagnosed correctly. Ortho had it wrong the whole time. I didn't know enough to demand tests and such.
Before we finally found our current chiro we saw several PT professionals, including two at our university sports rehab facility that works with all the college athletes, including gymnasts. We had no luck with any of them. They simply didn't know what to do with a 9 year old that was that strong and flexible. They didn't identify the right weaknesses and simply put her through the normal protocol. I truly believe that this right here has so much to do with why so many of these back issues never get better or keep coming back. We also saw another chiro (a gymnastics specialist that most of you would know the name of) and a manual therapist that other teammates had had good luck with for other types of injuries. This type of back problem was not something that was common in our gym at all and my dd didn't fall into the normal parameters for this type of injury as well so I didn't have a ton of resources.
I believe a lot in my gut and intuition and I believe that is what led us to our current guy. I literally plucked him off the internet. It was like he jumped off the page at me. I emailed him and he got back to me within hours and she saw him the next day. Within a week we had an MRI and a diagnosis. It happened like a whirlwind pulling us along and I believe that that is a sure sign you are headed in the wrong direction. Unfortunately it was devastating news. But my dd wasn't ready to give up. He gut told her she wasn't done and I have taught her to trust that. After having the ortho tell us it was all over for my daughter and then me promising my daughter that I would do my best to at least find someone else who would talk to us and try to help her, I spent endless sleepless nights reading 100s of research papers and scouring the internet for any information I could find on her issue and possible treatments and outcomes. After all this I was convinced that sticking with our chiropractor was the way to go.
I don't think it is ever too soon to look for someone to help you and to educate yourself as much as possible. But again, be careful and trust your gut. A good practitioner would never rush into any treatments. Our took his time, did lots of tests and investigation and when treatments started he focused on her hips and pelvis which is where the problems actually lied. Her back was just the symptom and ultimate outcome of years of improper motor function.
Short answer. Yes, go. But listen to your gut and look for one that also offers other modalities (manual therapy, pt, acupuncture etc) either themselves or in their office. Look for someone who treats athletes and injuries and focuses on whole body treatment, not just spinal adjustments. And for sure avoid the ambulance chasers. They are as bad as their legal counterparts. Look for bachelors degrees in related fields. Look and ask about ongoing education.
Ask an open ended question about what new treatments they think are promising or something like that. How they answer can be extremely telling about how they think about things, how open they are to learn, how connected they are to different types of treatments and communities. Are they open to having these discussions with you or are they just telling you to trust them. We have a very open dialogue and he is always teaching me and I come with things I have read and he and I discuss them. We have mutual respect and mutual investment and keeping her going and allowing her to maximize her potential and reach her goals. I am very lucky.
What to bring? We didn't have anything to bring with us so we didn't bring anything. If you have copies of any medical records or tests then I am sure that would be helpful. Ours has seen all my dd's records at this point but I didn't have them to bring at first. It's really just like seeing any other medical provider. Or at least it should be. Nothing to be scared of, really.
My last piece of advice is that you have to follow through with what they say to do at home. If you can find the right PT program then it can work, but only if they actually do it. My daughter came home every day from school and did 20-30 minutes of exercises and stretches and then did this again after practicing for 4 hours before she went to bed. She still does exercises over three years later at least three days a week and stretches daily. We are continuously having to get creative and make it harder and harder. Good news is she has an iron core now. She is so incredibly strong. Our chiro now takes great pleasure in finding a little weakness somewhere as she really just isn't weak anywhere anymore. This is what it took and continues to take for my daughter to keep going. She was adamant and fully committed to the process. From my experience, it is the only way it works.
Sorry, I rambled again. Feeling emotional about all this stuff with
@wallinbl and their situation today, another gymnast at my daughter quit today due to these exact issues (that is two this week, other one not for back issues but a good friend of my dds so really sad) and then there is all these people coming forward about sexual assault (so proud of all of them) and my own experiences with that being brought to the surface after spending my whole life pushing them away. So, I apologize if I am extra verbose and rambly today. I'm kinda a mess.