Posts Tagged ‘Spine’
Friday, July 18th, 2008
THE MIND BODY CONNECTION
Within our chiropractic training and culture is a diverse range of physical indicators that we observe, measure and monitor to help us to diagnose our patients’ physical state: The history is used to narrow down our list of disorders or even diseases which may be causing the problem; Posture tells us how misaligned someone’s body and spine is; Radiographs show us how much decay and degeneration has developed; Range of motion tests measure how stiff they have become; SEMG assesses how tight muscles are; our palpation skills feel where there is contraction, restriction, fixation and misalignment.
And then we apply a physical therapy to try and intervene on the physical disorder that we have isolated.
It has almost become a cliché that there is a mind/body connection. But have we tended to minimise this relationship? Or have we even missed the point of this revelation? Are we persisting with the convenient separation and compartmentalisation of these two dimensions? We say, “oh yes the mind can affect the body, and the body can affect the mind” – but in saying this do we miss the paradigm of the mind/body relationship?
In other words the mind IS the body, and the body IS the mind.
When you are feeling certain emotions like anger, resentment, guilt, frustration – your physical body is different to how it is when you are feeling emotions like love, acceptance, peace, joy, reward. And if your physical body is different, then your thoughts, feelings and emotions are different. One doesn’t lead to the other – one is the other.
Let’s take another look at our list of “physical indicators” from another point of view, to see if we can see what they might really mean in terms of the mind/body:
The History is really someone’s story about the suffering they currently feel. And we are very good at asking questions about how the suffering feels: Where it hurts, how much it hurts, how big an area does the hurt cover, when does it feel a bit better and when does it feel a bit worse? But do we miss the most important question? What does the hurt mean – to them? Here’s another way of asking this question to help those who can’t make a connection – “if this hurt didn’t go away what would it mean you couldn’t do?”, or “if this hurt didn’t go away what aspect of your life do you think would be most affected?” Do you know that if something in your therapeutic relationship and encounter doesn’t allay or release this connection between their pain and suffering, that their mind/body will resist healing?
Postural Assessment: Why does anyone have bad posture? Because they don’t know they have it! Why would anyone carry their head too far forwards when that skull and its contents are as heavy as a bowling ball? Because they don’t recognise that it is where it is – they have poor somatic awareness. Here’s a thought – they will also have a proportionately poor psychic awareness. In other words they will actually have poor somatopsychic awareness. Check it out next time you examine someone with really bad posture: Ask them how they are feeling emotionally, ask them how aware they are of each of their internal bodily functions: More often than not the same disconnect will exist.
What about those protective buttresses that are being layered down inside their body – the ones you see growing around their skeleton on their Radiographs? Ask yourself this question: How strong, thick and solid are the protective mechanisms that this person has built around their emotions and memories? What will it take to chip away this person’s emotional fortress? The resistance, slowness of their recovery and the common poor prognosis could be reflective of their hardened interaction with the world in a more general sense.
And that stiffness that has built up in their Spinal Range of Movement, that you prescribe stretching exercises to reverse. Here is my observation: Range of motion is directly proportionate to range of emotion. My saying goes like this – “concrete body – concrete mind”. Observe how flexible these people are to suggested changes in their state of mind or lifestyle, and you may see a mirror image of their body’s flexibility.
What about that tension that you see on their SEMG? You may interpret it as physical tension: And you might ask; “maybe you are working too hard”, “maybe you did too much gardening on the weekend”, “maybe you aren’t sitting up straight”? How about this one – muscle tension is proportionate to neurological tone, which is dependent on emotional state. Maybe their body hasn’t been working overtime – maybe their mind has.
And all those things you “feel” while you are Palpating: Stiffness, resistance, swelling, and misalignment. Have you ever taken a moment to ask yourself while you have a direct connection with this person’s field of intelligence: “What am I feeling as I palpate this person?” You may be great at palpating, but, if you get good at feeling, then you will get even better at FEELING. You may even glean more insight into that person’s state of wellbeing in thirty seconds of palpation than sixty minutes of talk…
How does any of this help you to become a better healer, or a more profitable businessman? When you GET IT, that you are a body/mind and that your practice members are body/minds – Then you will experience greater quality and wholeness in your life, and your customers will receive greater quality and wholeness from you as a healer – and people pay for quality…
(ps. If you think that this is suggesting that you have to become more of a psychologist or counsellor to be a better chiropractor – then you have missed the point – this has nothing to do with analysing and identifying the past hurts and experiences and helping someone to cognitively overcome the related dysfunctional thoughts and feelings. What this is about is that there is a whole new dimension awaiting you when you become more conscious of the mind/body synergy – what you are doing right now therapeutically will offer a much deeper meaning for both you and your practice members. In other words I am not talking about a change in procedure – but a change in consciousness.)
Find Out More About Training To Help You Make This Transition at http://www.torquerelease.com.au/TRT-Training.htm
Tags: Acceptance, Anger, Anger Resentment, Bad Posture, Better Healer, Body, Chiropractic Training, Chiropractor, Concrete Body, Concrete Mind, Connection, Consciousness, Contraction, Counsellor, Decay, Degeneration, Diagnose, Disconnect, Disease, Disorder, Dysfunctional Thoughts, Emotion, Emotional State, Emotions, Feel Better, Feel Worse, Field Of Intelligence, Fixation, Flexibility, Frustration, Gardening, Guilt, Healing, History, How Much It Hurts, Internal Bodily Functions, Joy, Lifestyle, Love, Measure, Memories, MIND BODY, Mind/Body, Misaligned, Misalignment, Monitor, Neurological Tone, New Dimension, Observe, Palpating, Palpation, Paradigm, Patient, Peace, Peace Joy, People Pay For Quality, Physical Findings, Physical Indicator, Physical Indicators, Physical State, Physical Therapy, Poor Prognosis, Postural Assessment, Posture, Problem, Profitable Businessman, Psychic Awareness, Psychologist, Quality, Radiograph, Range Of Motion, Range Of Motion Is Directly Proportionate To Range Of Emotion, Recovery, Resentment, Resistance, Restriction, Revelation, Reward, SEMG, Sit Up Straight, Skeleton, Somatic Awareness, Somatopsychic Awareness, Spinal Range Of Movement, Spine, State Of Mind, State Of Wellbeing, Stiff, Stiffness, Stretching Exercises, Suffering, Swelling, Synergy, Tension, The Body Can Affect The Mind, The Body IS The Mind, The Mind Can Affect The Body, The Mind IS The Body, Therapeutic, Tight Muscle, Tight Muscles, What Does The Hurt Mean, Where It Hurts, Wholeness
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Saturday, April 12th, 2008
Just in case you think that the last historical feature on chiropractic care and mental ailments is historically interesting, but currently irrelevant - Here’s some more recent evidence for the role for chiropractic in mental state… A systematic review of psychological outcomes in randomised controlled trials.
The most important risk factors for back and neck pain are psychosocial. Nevertheless, systematic reviews of spinal manipulation have concentrated on pain and spine related disability, and ignored psychological outcomes.
This review assessed whether spinal manipulation was effective in improving psychological outcome… There was some evidence that spinal manipulation improved psychological outcomes compared with verbal interventions.
Read The Full Abstract At Find Health Articles…
Tags: Abstract, Back And Neck Pain, Back Pain, Better Health, Chiropractic, Chiropractic Care, Chiropractor, Disability, Effective, Evidence, Find Articles, Find Health Articles, Health Articles, Historical Feature, Improving, Interventions, Mental Ailments, Mental State, Neck Pain, Pain, Psychological Outcomes, Psychological Response, Psychosocial, Randomised Controlled Trials, Risk Factors, Spinal Manipulation, Spine, Systematic Review, Systematic Reviews, Verbal Interventions
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Saturday, April 12th, 2008
Beating addiction may take an extra nudge from the chiropractor.
When Jose Mehlman enrolled in the Exodus addiction treatment center as a study participant, he had hit bottom. Years before, he tried treatments that fell into his lap—anything that might help him. But they were “nowhere near effective.” Today, Mehlman is living a viable, drug-free life. Why was his Exodus experience so successful? “I think that chiropractic care was an integral part of my recovery,” he says.
But what does the spine have to do with addiction? The connection may be explained by the presence, or absence, of brain chemicals that make us feel good. When the spinal chord and its nerves are in proper order, chemicals known as neurotransmitters are released in a specific sequence, like falling dominoes. The result: A state of well-being. However, subluxations or misalignments of the spine can cause pressure and tension on surrounding tissue, interrupting this feel-good sequence.
Jay Holder, a chiropractor and physician with the Exodus Treatment Center in Miami Beach, wondered how patients would fare on a traditional rehab treatment program supplemented with chiropractic care. Some 98 subjects, including Mehlman, participated in the study, which was published in Molecular Psychiatry. Holder’s research found that when an addiction treatment program was supplemented with frequent chiropractic adjustments over a 30-day period, the patients displayed an unprecedented 100 percent program completion rate. In addition, initially rampant depression and anxiety dropped significantly.
In comparison, the study’s two other groups—one, a passive group who underwent only standard rehabilitation, and another, a placebo group who received sham chiropractic care—displayed significantly lower retention rates, and were about as likely to finish the program as the average recovering addict in the U.S. (a probability of about 55 percent).
Holder’s study used a specific chiropractic technique called the Torque Release Technique, which focuses less on the alignment of the bones and more on what he calls the “neurophysiology of the spine.” Certain types of subluxations can interfere with the tissue that extends from the brain stem through the spine and into the coccyx, hampering systems like the limbic system (known as the “seat of emotions”) and throwing off neurotransmitters that keep us feeling our best. Holder’s research suggests that drug treatment programs prove to be more successful with this type of chiropractic care…
Click Here To Read The Full Article At Psychology Today…
Click Here To Find Out More About Chiropractic And Addictions Recovery…
Tags: 100% Retention, 30-Day, Addiction, Addiction Treatment Center, Addiction Treatment Program, Alignment Of Bones, Anxiety, Beating Addiction, Brain Chemicals, Brain Stem, Chiropractic Adjustments, Chiropractic Care, Chiropractic Technique, Chiropractor, Coccyx, Completion Rate, Connection, Depression, Dominoes, Drug-Free Life, Effective, Exodus, Exodus Addiction Treatment Center, Feel Good, Hit Bottom, Jay Holder, Jose Mehlman, Limbic System, Miami Beach, Misalignments, Molecular Psychiatry, Nerves, Neurophysiology, Neurotransmitters, Passive Group, Patients, Placebo Group, Pressure, Program Completion, Psychology Today, Recovering Addict, Recovery, Rehab Treatment Program, Research, Retention Rates, Seat Of Emotions, Sham, Sham Chiropractic, Specific Chiropractic, Spinal Chord, Spinal Cord, Spine, State Of Well-Being, Study Participant, Subluxations, Successful, Supplemented, Technique, Tension, Torque Release Technique, Treatments, Trt
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Wednesday, October 31st, 2007
Have you ever bet on the horses, played two-up or any other form of gambling? The nature of this industry is that the most likely outcome is also the least rewarding one! Bet on a horse that has odds of 2/1 and most likely it is going to win, but you are only going to get a little bit of extra cash for this achievement. On the other hand if the horse you bet on is 100/1, more than likely you are going to be waiting for a while after the winner passes the post to see your horse cross the line - but IF he does win then you are going to get a great return on your “investment”.
What if there was a “game of chance” that paid higher dividends when the odds/ratio was also going to make your bet the most likely winner? Wouldn’t this mean less time wasted looking for the “long shot” and bigger returns on your investment? Fortunately such a “game” does exist - it’s called chiropractic…
Did you know that two separate research processes have confirmed and agreed on the “odds ratio” for subluxation probabilities? That is; a patient is lying prone on your adjusting table - which level of the spine is most likely to be subluxated, and hence is the fist level of the spine that you should always check? Why would you waste your time looking at the least likely spinal level first? If you knew the ranking list of primary subluxations then you would save yourself a LOT of time, as on average you would find EVERY subluxation quicker. The less time it takes to find it, the less time it will take to fix it: Less time CAN be converted to more money.
So what is this ranking list I hear you ask? Unfortunately space does not allow me to cover this comprehensively. To give you a hint though - If you take the name of one of the most-used low-force techniques and reverse the order of the words, you have the first and second most likely primary subluxations on the planet. The rest of the list is covered thoroughly during the Torque Release Technique Program, including the differential diagnostic tests that reliably tell you whether each segment needs to be adjusted, OR NOT, and what correctional vectors will give you the greatest return from your adjustment.
Click Here To Find Out More About TRT Training…
Tags: Achievement, Adjusted, Adjusting Table, Adjustment, Bet On A Horse, Bigger Returns, Chiropractic, Comprehensive, Correctional Vector, Differential, Differential Diagnostic Test, Dividends, Extra Cash, Fist, Gambling, Gambling Industry, Game Of Chance, Horses, Investment, Little Bit, Lot, Low-Force Technique, Money, More Money, Most Likely Outcome, Nature, Odds, Odds Ratio, Odds/Ratio, Patient, Planet, Primary Subluxation, Probabilities, Program, Prone, Ranking, Research, Research Processes, Return, Rewarding, Segment, Short Cuts, Spine, Subluxated, Subluxation, Subluxations, Torque, Torque Release Technique, TRT Training, Win, Winner
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Wednesday, October 17th, 2007
Imagine if every Australian was allowed to receive one adjustment per week, and that adjustment was covered under Medicare? But here’s the condition: You can only deliver one adjustment per week, per person, and you have to demonstrate the measure benefits of those adjustments every three months using impartial objective outcome tools. I guess there would be a minority of DCs who would think they had found easy street and delivered any old adjustment, in any old fashion, without much consideration for where or how they delivered that adjustment - just so long as the cheques kept rolling in. But for the rest of us, we would want to be completely diligent in ensuring that this one adjustment was a good one, a really good one, and that we adjusted the segment which most needed to be adjusted, and in the right direction because you can’t just hit it on both sides - you only get one shot!!
Think about this in the context of how you currently prioritise how you deliver your adjustments each and every day:
1) Do you start at the bottom and work your way up, or some other variation of this theme? Check and adjust the low back, check and adjust the thoracics, then roll them over and check and adjust their neck? Most DCs have an order in which they adjust everyone. It may not be the order I mentioned, but in most cases it will be a “routine” based on the practitioner’s habit as opposed to some patient-centred findings dictating where you start and finish. STOP IT: Take an extra few seconds to analyse your patients’ spines and make a decision about which is the most important adjustment to make on that visit.
2) Do you adjust the same segments in the same order, any three visits in a row? I thought your practice members were supposed to be getting better and progressing to a new level of health - why then would they continue to have the same subluxations? If you are activating retracing in their body then surely the next layer of subluxation should appear and need to be corrected? And, since they last saw you a lot of different stresses have presented, so they may have a new and different layer appearing on the next visit. Why do we say that the body is a self-healing adaptive organism and then fail to adapt and change our adjustments to keep up? BEWARE: If you check your notes and see that patients are getting the same mix of adjustments on every visit then there’s only two options - A) you put the stuck pattern there with your repetitive habituating stimulus, or, B) their spine isn’t evolving under your care - either way you need to try a new strategy.
3) Do you have a system that allows you to make a live analysis and differential diagnosis of which subluxation wants to be adjusted at any given moment in time? When we teach TRT we show you 14 different indicators of subluxation and train you in the differential diagnosis technique that gives you absolute certainty and precision in making this vital decision…
Click Here To Find Out More About TRT Training…
An interesting question arising from my hypothetical above is for our profession as wellness providers. I used the weekly example based on the observation that:
1) If I could get adjusted as often as I liked I would probably get an adjustment every week;
2) I conducted a highly informal survey of a group of my practice members when I asked them “if you could get adjusted whenever you liked and it didn’t cost you anything, how often would you get adjusted?” The most common reply was “I’d come every week”;
3) I have been using functional assessment technologies in my practice for over a decade and have observed qualitatively and quantitatively the biggest changes when clients are getting adjusted weekly (go beyond three weeks and you will see a significant percentage of clients start to deteriorate functionally);
4) Many chiropractors I have met who claim to be wellness DCs get adjusted weekly and recommend weekly adjustments.
But, how much would this cost the community if every man, woman and child was adjusted weekly: Using the round figure of 20 million people and $40 per adjustment, that comes to $800 million per week.
Here’s the ultimate challenge: We would have to be able to demonstrate without a shadow of a doubt that we were saving the Australian economy at least $1 Billion per week? Can we do this? Your thoughts are welcome…
Tags: 14 Indicators Of Subluxation, Absolute Certainty, Activating, Adapt, Adaptive, Adjust, Adjusted, Adjustment, Analyse, Australian, Benefits, Body, Change, Cheques, Chiropractor, Condition, Corrected, Cost, Covered Under Medicare, DC, Dcs, Decision, Deliver, Demonstrate, Deteriorate, Differential Diagnosis, Diligent, Direction, Easy Street, Economy, Evolving, Extra, Findings, Functional, Functional Assessment, Getting Better, Habit, Habituating, Health, Hypothetical, Imagine, Impartial, Important, Informal Survey, Interesting, Layer, Live Analysis, Low Back, Measure, Measure Benefits, Medicare, Neck, New Strategy, Objective, Observation, Old Fashion, Organism, Outcome Tools, Patient-Centred, Patients, Practice Member, Practice Members, Practitioner, Precision, Prioritise, Profession, Progress, Providers, Qualitative, Quantitative, Question, Retracing, Right Direction, Routine, Saving, Segment, Segments, Self-Healing, Spine, Spines, Stimulus, Stress, Stuck Pattern, Subluxations, System, Technique, Technologies, Thoracic, Three Months, Train, Trt, TRT Training, Ultimate Challenge, Variation, Weekly, Wellness
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