Guest guest Posted March 15, 2004 Report Share Posted March 15, 2004 Anyway after listening to me and then getting copies of my blood work and looking up info on EDS he came back and said he thought I had a C1 subluxation. Basically a rotary/twist sublux which doesn't show on x-rays. He said it is clinically dx'd by the symptoms you present with (my research since then has found out you can see it with specific CT scans but even then it may be missed). He said the subluxed vertebre caused the muscle next to it to spasm which created a self feeding circle - sublux causes spasm then spasm keeps sublux from going back in and back and forth. He also said I had Neuritis which is a damaged or inflammed nerve. This was what was causing such severe agonizing pain. The nerve could have been inflammed by the sublux or the muscle spasm. ----------------- A couple of other suggestions for you, including one you can do yourself. The one you can do yourself is called the X technique in Polarity Therapy. You know where C1 is. Reach back behind your neck with both hands and put the tips of your two middle fingers of each hand against the transverse processes of the vertebrae. Ground and center yourself. Close your eyes and do deep, focused breathing. Breath up your spine, visualizing the breath coming from the center of the earth straight up your back and right through C1. Breath out through your mouth, visualizing the breath moving down the front of your body. You also want to do this so it is deep abdominal breathing and not shallow chest breathing. Focus your " awareness " right on C1. See if you can detect what feels like a tingling, buzzing, wavy vibration or pulse. There are several acupressure points and meridians in this area. Hold this for from 3-5 minutes. It also would help if you visualized the muscles relaxing and the vertebrae moving back to its proper position. This is an extremely effective technique for sublux problems and the one I probably use more than any other. Bare minimum, you are also applying pressure at the same time - which is what you are doing already. If you can detect the energy (and it might take a time or two until you realize what it is you are feeling because it can be very subtle until you get used to it), you want to hold for a balance. By that, I mean until the energetic sensations are the same in both hands. Then again, sometimes the sensations are anything but subtle. Sometimes they are very vigorous. You might also feel a sensation of warmth or what feels like the vertebrae " wobbling. " If it feels like it is " wobbling " it is because that is what it is doing - it is shifting. Something else you might feel is called the Therapeutic Pulse. It will be like a regular pulse except it bounces back and forth between your hands like a ping-pong ball. Typically, it will start out light and slow, build in intensity and speed, and then just fade away. If you do get this sensation, keeping holding until it stops. The other suggestion to consider is Cranialsacral Therapy. It is very gentle and non-invasive. I stood for years with my head and neck angled down and forward because of a cervical misalignment. A couple of sessions of CST from one of my classmates a year and a half ago totally fixed the problem and I haven't been bothered with it since. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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