Archive for the tag: Pain

The Trigeminal Nerve's Role in Cervicogenic Headache | Referred Pain

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The Trigeminal Nerve’s Role in Cervicogenic Headache | Referred Pain

#physiotutors #CGheadache #trigeminalnerve

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Link: https://youtu.be/jOrrBSrXbyo
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This is not medical advice! The content is intended to be educational only for health professionals and students. If you are a patient, seek care of a health care professional.
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How to Relieve Headache Pain (Suboccipital Mobilization)

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How to Relieve Headache Pain (Suboccipital Mobilization)

Today’s video covers a soft tissue mobilization technique for the suboccipital muscles, which can be used to help relieve headache pain.

My new book contains rehab exercise programs for the 50 most common injuries and pain issues, including headaches that come from the upper neck region. Click the link to learn more! https://a.co/d/0HDOdYI
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Wise Anderson Protocol – Overcoming Catastrophic Thinking in Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndromes

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Wise Anderson Protocol - Overcoming Catastrophic Thinking in Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndromes

Catastrophic thinking only serves to worsen the problematic symptoms associated with chronic pain. Here Dr. Wise explains how to solve this negative pattern and find relief.

Pelvic Pain Symptoms once treated can return with the onset of stress.

The Wise Anderson Protocol is all about teaching patients how to prevent the recurrence of stress-related symptoms of pelvic pain.

Learn More about the Wise-Anderson Protocol (formerly known as the Stanford Protocol) at: http://www.pelvicpainhelp.com/

Order “A Headache in the Pelvis” Here: http://amzn.to/1ALuzvk

What I think has been overdone and a big waste of American healthcare dollars, is the money that has been thrown in trying to get x-ray images/ fancy blood tests, and in my experience, over the years, I have not found that a CT scan or an MRI has been helpful in any degree, so this is a waste of money most of the time. If there is a lot of urinary dysfunction and if there is pain with bladder filling, I think it is important for us to make sure that there isn’t an inflammatory component in the bladder its self. This is known as interstitial cystitis. The inflammatory process feeds on the muscular pain and it just becomes a cycle of pain that is difficult to break, our objective is to break that pain and to get patients to heal themselves.
We have to keep I mind what the objective is, and that is to give this patient a new quality of life, reduce their pain and over time completely eliminated. This list of symptoms in the pain arena people often have a lot of discomfort in the base of the pelvis. Some men compare the feeling to sitting on a golf ball. Sitting seems to trigger a lot of these pains. Associated with that is an aching and a sensitivity, even in the testicles, causing squirming in distress. Some in the lower back, it feels like it might be a back problem but it’s usually lower. Some patients complain about pain radiating into the groin and into the thigh, a common complain area. There’s also suprapubic discomfort, or right below the belly button.
In addition to those symptoms we have sexual dysfunction, with men it can be pain after ejaculation or during orgasm, with women it can be during sex where it’s just a contact form of discomfort. And, there’s a lot of anxiety about having sex. Men will often have ejaculation problems and also have difficulty attaining an erection. It’s well know that pain in the pelvis can be very distracting to the nerves which are responsible for creating the relaxation that’s required for an erection. Then of course there’s the discomfort and dysfunction of bowel movements, when even having a movement, or after a movement, can be painful.
This is very upsetting for people it creates a lot of dismay people have had to quit their jobs, or go on disability in some cases. This becomes a spiral downward becoming despondent and depressed.

“A Headache in the Pelvis”. More information on pelvic pain and prostatitis can be found at: http://www.pelvicpainhelp.com/.

Wise Anderson Protocol: Pelvic Pain Syndrome is a Systemic & Local Issue

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Dr. Wise states that Pelvic pain syndrome is both a systemic and local problem, and goes on to describe specifically. He also shares that he himself suffered with this condition for 22 years, and was able to effectively cure himself of these symptoms.
Systemically, the nervous system is an alarmed state and can cause tightening of the pelvic floor muscles for many years. Locally, the chronic anxiety results in tension on the pelvic muscles on a chronic basis. Conventional treatment tends to neglect the issue of the systemic relationship to the local, and offers little help to either facet.
Typically, occurring in a significant number of patients, chronic tightening of the pelvic muscles is caused by an ongoing anxiety which highly arouses the nervous system. This is the root of the dysfunction and what the Wise-Anderson protocol has become efficient at treating.
Focusing only on one side of the issue is obviously ineffective, and only treating the root cause can create effective relief. Omitting the treatment of the root cause can only offer temporary relief, and may not eliminate the symptoms.
Sadly, sufferers have become accustomed to their heightened nervous system, and are highly unaware of their chronic anxiety. Dr. Wise refers to this as “not noticing you are wet when you’re swimming”, which is not an uncommon occurrence.

Learn More about the Wise-Anderson Protocol (formerly known as the Stanford Protocol) at: http://www.pelvicpainhelp.com/

Order “A Headache in the Pelvis” Here: http://amzn.to/1ALuzvk
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