Posts tagged health
HEADACHES – What a Pain in the Neck!

I recently had a patient who suffered from migraines for more than 20 years—most of her adult life—and who frequently relied on Imitrex, a heavy-duty prescription medication. After several fascial manipulation treatments, her headaches have become much less frequent. In fact, they’ve diminished from several episodes per week to fewer than 1 per month: a huge life change!

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THE QUICK FIX IS NOT A FIX
  • Rapid Weight Loss vs. Lifestyle Change
  • Anti-inflammatory medication vs. Anti-inflammatory Diet
  • Pain medication vs. Chiropractic care and Applied Kinesiology
  • Anti-anxiety meds vs. Meditation and exercise
  • Infatuation vs. True Love
  • Fast food vs. Home cooking

As one can see by looking at the above list, the quickest ways are not necessarily the best ways, and most of the time, are not the healthiest ways.

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INJURY PREVENTION, CAUSE AND RECOVERY: PART I

PART I: PREVENTION

1) Warm-up. This doesn’t have to be a long time, maybe 5-10 minutes. Warming up means getting the blood flowing. Blood carries oxygen to the muscles, so that the muscles can breathe and function properly without injury! I recommend something mildly aerobic- bicycling, walking rapidly, gentle jog, gentle jumping jacks, anything that gets the blood flowing. Simple stretching is not aerobic enough...

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INJURY CAUSE, PREVENTION AND RECOVERY: PART II

PART II: WHY INJURIES OCCUR

1) Poor Form (as mentioned in Part I).

2) Overuse. Too much resistance, more than the body can handle, or not enough rest between exercising same muscle/muscles. An injury can then occur because a) one strains the agonist, b) one sprains the ligament of the joint in motion, c) one strains the antagonist trying to balance and counter the motion, d) one strains other recruiting muscles because the agonist is not strong enough to handle the load.

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INJURY CAUSE, PREVENTION AND RECOVERY: PART III

PART III: RECOVERY

6) Applied Kinesiology. Kinesiology is the study of muscles and movement. Applied Kinesiology utilizes muscle-testing techniques to determine where there are muscular, structural and functional imbalances in the body. Treatment involves balancing the musculoskeletal system by stimulating various reflexes to enhance lymphatic circulation and blood flow, and/or treating the muscle at its origin and insertion (where they attach via tendons to the bone), or in the belly of the muscle where the muscle spindle is regulating contraction and relaxation. Treatment may also involve recommending specific nutrients to speed up the healing process.

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