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Any helps for whiplash?

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Ginny!

I am glad to see you posting but am shocked to hear of your car accident!!

I hope that you had x-rays after the accident? If not, it's important that

you do to rule out fractures.

Chiropractic in the neck area in someone with EDS is a tender area, please

be careful and avoid anyone who will do adjustments. Gentle massage is best

to avoid injury.

Jill

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Ginny!

I am glad to see you posting but am shocked to hear of your car accident!!

I hope that you had x-rays after the accident? If not, it's important that

you do to rule out fractures.

Chiropractic in the neck area in someone with EDS is a tender area, please

be careful and avoid anyone who will do adjustments. Gentle massage is best

to avoid injury.

Jill

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I agree that you don't want to have any forceful adjustments on your

neck from a chiro. However, if you can find someone, and PT or an MT

or a chiro or someone else who does cranialsacral therapy they should

be able to help. Cranialsacral therapy deals with energy and is not

forceful.

If you have a copy of the (famous on this board) Gach book there are

several acupressure things you can do yourself. Mike Uggen posted a

neck release a while back - you should be able to find it with a

search - if not repost and I'll see if I can find my printed copy

tonight and post it again for you.

Hope you are feeling better soon.

-- In ceda , " Jill " wrote:

> Ginny!

>

> I am glad to see you posting but am shocked to hear of your car

accident!!

>

> I hope that you had x-rays after the accident? If not, it's

important that

> you do to rule out fractures.

>

> Chiropractic in the neck area in someone with EDS is a tender area,

please

> be careful and avoid anyone who will do adjustments. Gentle

massage is best

> to avoid injury.

>

> Jill

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I agree that you don't want to have any forceful adjustments on your

neck from a chiro. However, if you can find someone, and PT or an MT

or a chiro or someone else who does cranialsacral therapy they should

be able to help. Cranialsacral therapy deals with energy and is not

forceful.

If you have a copy of the (famous on this board) Gach book there are

several acupressure things you can do yourself. Mike Uggen posted a

neck release a while back - you should be able to find it with a

search - if not repost and I'll see if I can find my printed copy

tonight and post it again for you.

Hope you are feeling better soon.

-- In ceda , " Jill " wrote:

> Ginny!

>

> I am glad to see you posting but am shocked to hear of your car

accident!!

>

> I hope that you had x-rays after the accident? If not, it's

important that

> you do to rule out fractures.

>

> Chiropractic in the neck area in someone with EDS is a tender area,

please

> be careful and avoid anyone who will do adjustments. Gentle

massage is best

> to avoid injury.

>

> Jill

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Guest guest

I agree that you don't want to have any forceful adjustments on your

neck from a chiro. However, if you can find someone, and PT or an MT

or a chiro or someone else who does cranialsacral therapy they should

be able to help. Cranialsacral therapy deals with energy and is not

forceful.

If you have a copy of the (famous on this board) Gach book there are

several acupressure things you can do yourself. Mike Uggen posted a

neck release a while back - you should be able to find it with a

search - if not repost and I'll see if I can find my printed copy

tonight and post it again for you.

Hope you are feeling better soon.

-- In ceda , " Jill " wrote:

> Ginny!

>

> I am glad to see you posting but am shocked to hear of your car

accident!!

>

> I hope that you had x-rays after the accident? If not, it's

important that

> you do to rule out fractures.

>

> Chiropractic in the neck area in someone with EDS is a tender area,

please

> be careful and avoid anyone who will do adjustments. Gentle

massage is best

> to avoid injury.

>

> Jill

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Hi,

My 17 year old got whiplash in Jan from an auto accident. She did some massage

therapy, and pt. and has taken it pretty easy since. Of course, she's had

bronchitis and mono, so she hasn't been able to do much.

I am taking my 15 year old to the chiro today. We will see what happens. I'll

write and let you know.

I've been to one, but he was too far away to keep going to. I may end up trying

this new guy, if he helps . I'll be asking if he knows about EDS>

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Hi,

My 17 year old got whiplash in Jan from an auto accident. She did some massage

therapy, and pt. and has taken it pretty easy since. Of course, she's had

bronchitis and mono, so she hasn't been able to do much.

I am taking my 15 year old to the chiro today. We will see what happens. I'll

write and let you know.

I've been to one, but he was too far away to keep going to. I may end up trying

this new guy, if he helps . I'll be asking if he knows about EDS>

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Dear Ginney,

From one who has had a car accident resulting in whiplash as well as neck

problems, I second Jill on the advice of getting an Xray. You should have that

done before trying anything. Do note though that some things, like a rotary

subluxation of the upper vertebrea, can not been seen on xrays.

From your symptoms I'd say the occipital nerve is inflammed. This could go

away by itself or it could get worse and become chronic - all depends on what is

causing the inflamation. This article gives a basic description

http://ww3.komotv.com/global/story.asp?s=1230136

You can try the home remedy my doc had me do which worked wonders - lie on

the floor and place a broom handle in the crook where your neck meets your head

with the handle applying pressure to the area of pain; keep the pressure up

until the pain passes. Repeat during the day. This should break the cycle of

muscle spasms caused by the nerve irritation and if something is slightly out of

place it has a better chance of going in by itself if the spasms are stopped (I

had a rotary subluxation and it took almost 2 weeks for mine to go back in).

Hugs,

B.

HEDS, New Jersey, USA

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I get headaches similar to this. I've found that trigger point

therapy, ice, hot baths and rest all help. Sometimes one works and

sometimes another works. I have to experiment with each and every

headache to get relief. Anyway, a couple weeks ago I had a headache

a couple weeks ago that would not go away. I eventually put the ice

pack in the middle of my back - just slightly higher than my

shoulders and the pain went away quickly.

The several doctors I've gone to through the years only want to give

me pain meds and tell me to reduce my stress.

> Dear Ginney,

>

> From one who has had a car accident resulting in whiplash as

well as neck problems, I second Jill on the advice of getting an

Xray. You should have that done before trying anything. Do note

though that some things, like a rotary subluxation of the upper

vertebrea, can not been seen on xrays.

>

> From your symptoms I'd say the occipital nerve is inflammed.

This could go away by itself or it could get worse and become

chronic - all depends on what is causing the inflamation. This

article gives a basic description

>

> http://ww3.komotv.com/global/story.asp?s=1230136

>

> You can try the home remedy my doc had me do which worked

wonders - lie on the floor and place a broom handle in the crook

where your neck meets your head with the handle applying pressure to

the area of pain; keep the pressure up until the pain passes. Repeat

during the day. This should break the cycle of muscle spasms caused

by the nerve irritation and if something is slightly out of place it

has a better chance of going in by itself if the spasms are stopped

(I had a rotary subluxation and it took almost 2 weeks for mine to go

back in).

>

> Hugs,

> B.

> HEDS, New Jersey, USA

>

>

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Hi Valarie,

I appreciated your input! I'm starting to get more familiar with what

happens to the neck in a whiplash situation. I had x-rays done and everything

looks

fine, so I went off to a chiro who uses a gentle method to adjust (she uses a

hand held device for this- don't remember the name of it). Later she will

use cranialsacral therapy.

I'll be chewing on what you said and see how I feel tomorrow after having two

adjustments today. Here's hoping!

Thanks, Valarie:)

Ginny

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Hi Valarie,

I appreciated your input! I'm starting to get more familiar with what

happens to the neck in a whiplash situation. I had x-rays done and everything

looks

fine, so I went off to a chiro who uses a gentle method to adjust (she uses a

hand held device for this- don't remember the name of it). Later she will

use cranialsacral therapy.

I'll be chewing on what you said and see how I feel tomorrow after having two

adjustments today. Here's hoping!

Thanks, Valarie:)

Ginny

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Hi ,

Went to the doc and had x-rays done...everything looked normal so I went on

to a chiro that does cranialsacral therapy. Had my first visit today and she

did 2 gentle adjustments with a hand held instrument. That was it for today.

I go back in 2 days. Here's hoping this will help!

Thanks for the tips! I am going for a hot bath. I'm a schoolteacher and

with great anticipation I'm looking forward to a BREAK!

TAke care!

Ginny

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I'm starting to get more familiar with what happens to the neck in a

whiplash situation. I had x-rays done and everything looks fine, so

I went off to a chiro who uses a gentle method to adjust (she uses a

hand held device for this- don't remember the name of it). Later

she will use cranialsacral therapy.

---------------------

If you want more details about what happens with whiplash, I have

quite a bit of information in my reference library. I also posted

some info recently for (she may have already sent it to

you).

I am glad to hear that you are seeing someone who is using a less

invasive technique than the standard thrust adjustment. The hand

held device, BTW, is called an acutator. They basically pull a

trigger that draws a little " thumper " back and releases it against

the vertebrae. Basically, it " taps " the vertebrae back in place

instead of forcefully pushing it back in place. I am also glad to

hear that you are going to have some cranial work done as a follow

up.

Something you need to be aware of, however, is that MOST chiros tend

to treat whiplash as a dysfunction of the cervical vertebrae. As

such, they tend to totally ignore the soft tissue issues which are

often more at fault than the vertebrae. Yes, the vertebrae can

become subluxed. However, the neck muscles also get strained,

including micro-tears.

The specific muscles affected depend entirely on the degree and

direction of force that caused the injury. Head-on, rear-end, and

side-impact collisions each affect entirely different muscles. It

might be the muscles in the front, back or side of the neck. Unless

properly treated, you will end up with compensating holding patterns

which just delays full recovery.

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Ginny - Glad you were able to find a chiro that uses gentle motions.

I read Mike's post and another name for that gizmo she used

is 'activator'. I agree with him that most often chiros don't

address the muscles - even when they do address the energy.

If she doesn't address the muscles let me know and I'll send some

info.

So - are you feeling better? Careful with the heat if you still have

inflamation - once I got into a hot bath with inflamation in my hip -

and I wasn't sure if I'd be able to get out again half hour later.

I didn't send the info - if you'd like it and Mike doesn't get it to

you before he heads out again, give a holler - I know it's somewhere

in this machine.

Enjoy your school break (school is out here in AL) - I could not be a

teacher. I can be (and am) with my four kids 24/7 and I truely enjoy

teaching and hanging with them - but a roomful of kids that I can't

control with a 'look' - I never survive.

> Hi ,

> Went to the doc and had x-rays done...everything looked normal so I

went on

> to a chiro that does cranialsacral therapy. Had my first visit

today and she

> did 2 gentle adjustments with a hand held instrument. That was it

for today.

> I go back in 2 days. Here's hoping this will help!

>

> Thanks for the tips! I am going for a hot bath. I'm a

schoolteacher and

> with great anticipation I'm looking forward to a BREAK!

>

> TAke care!

> Ginny

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