Tinnitus

How AtlasPROfilax® can help with Tinnitus


Tinnitus, hissing, or ringing in the ears

Of muscular origin

Some mandibular microtrauma such as bad occlusion or bruxism as well as those lateral macrotraumas in the skull, contribute to increase the tension of the temporal bone. Irritation of the muscles and nerves of the suboccipital region and of the temporomandibular joint often vitiate the ear signals, degenerating into possible tinnitus.

Effectiveness, improvements and limitations of AtlasPROfilax® in tinnitus

  • 27% of patients treated with AtlasPROfilax® report a disappearance of tinnitus.
  • 20% of patients report a 50% improvement after AtlasPROfilax®.
  • With AtlasPROfilax®, 13% of patients reported an 80% improvement in tinnitus.
  • 40% of patients reported no improvement after AtlasPROfilax®. This is because not everything comes from Atlas.
  • Moderate to very marked improvement is seen in cases where patients had increased tension of the temporomandibular complex.

Tinnitus resulting from cerumen plugging in the ears, otitis, exposure to very loud sounds (ballistic, mechanical, etc.), middle ear damage, vascular disease (carotid stenosis, aneurysms, intracranial hypertension, etc.), allergies, thyroiditis, multiple sclerosis or tumors; it constitutes a limitation to the effectiveness of the correction of the C1 MID.

Testimonials

AtlasPROfilax and Tinnitus

Tinnitus, ATM y dolor cervical y lumbar

"¡Ahora siento como si estuviera flotando entre las nubes!"

Related References:

  • Emary, Peter C. Chiropractic management of a 40-year-old female patient with Ménière disease. Journal of Chiropractic Medicine. Vol 9, Ed. 1. 2010.
  • Whedon, J. Reduction of tinnitus by spinal manipulation in a patient with presumptive rotational vertebral artery occlusion syndrome: a case report. alternative therapies in health and medicine. 2006.
  • Ikner CL; Hassen AH; Shaver TL; Objective monitoring of osteopathic manipulative treatment in tinnitus patients. West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine, Lewisburg, West Virginia, USA. The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association Vol. 86,pp. 671-672; J Am Osteopath Assoc; JAOA. 1986.
  • Hülse M. Cervicogenic hearing loss. HNO. 42(10):604-13. 1994.
  • Arneborg, Ernst; Basta, Dietmar. Gleichgewichtsstörungen: Diagnostik und Therapie beim Leitsymptom Schwindel. Thieme. 2011.

Disclaimer

Please read our disclaimer.

It is not our intention that readers of this website assume that the Minor Intervertebral Derangement of the Atlas is the only cause of the health problems listed earlier in this section.  Pain is usually a warning sign that there is an actual or potential tissue damage, so it is necessary to see a specialist to determine its possible causes.

E.g. headaches or local pain can have many causes and can also be a sign of an ongoing disease. Even apparent benign muscle pain can indicate a metabolic, immune, vascular or joint condition. Therefore, if you have any of these health problems, please contact your doctor and follow the proper treatment. Remember to manage your health quickly.

AtlasPROfilax® is a kinesiological method that supports allopathic and natural medicine as well as orthopedic dentistry. In no case does it interfere with or replace medical and/or dental treatments or medicines. The only purpose is to correct the MID of the Atlas to improve the quality of life of the patient and turn their body into a more fertile ground for any subsequent treatment and therapy.

The same way that a large number of patients react quite well to complementary medicine specialties (homeopathy, neural therapy, acupuncture, naturopathy, aromatherapy, nutraceuticals, osteopathy, chiropractic, massages, energy therapies, etc.), there is always a population that, due to a lack of receptivity to these techniques or due to the condition of their own health, does not have the expected results.

Likewise, as Chilean biologists Maturana and Varela state, "Living beings are networks of molecular productions where the produced molecules generate their interactions in the same network that produces them". This principle of autopoiesis, which deals with self-production and self-regulation, explains why some patients evolve favorably with a therapy while others don't.

All the above is to point out that the atlas MID correction has been shown to be highly effective in reducing benign chronic myofascial pain, in some functional alterations of posture as well as in the rearrangement of the Tonic Postural System. However, as in any specialty of complementary medicine, the results are proportional to the patient's autopoiesis.

There are several probable etiologies for the development of problems and pain in the body, from endogenous (genetic, congenital, autoimmune, etc.), exogenous (allergic, iatrogenic, pathogenic, etc.), environmental (mechanical and postural, ergonomic, professional, etc.) and multifactorial (neoplastic, idiopathic, psychosomatic, etc.) alterations.

The misalignment of the Atlas had not been taken into account up until the development of Osteopathy in 1874 by A. Taylor Still, M.D. and the birth of Chiropractic in 1895 by D. D. Palmer. The concept of Minor Intervertebral Desarrangement was included in 1969 by R. Maigne, M.D. The MID of the Atlas, studied in depth for 20 years by Dr. R.-C. Schümperli, E.M., was published in 1993.

The MID of C1 is one of the factors that triggers myofascial pain, but it is not the only one. Minor Intervertebral Derangement of any area of the spine may be painfully projected into certain muscles and ligaments. This to point out that the MID of C1 is not a justification for all myofascial pain, although the correction of this MID helps to reverse MIDs from other areas.

The correction of the MID of C1 has been highly favorable for the following cases:

  • Fascial hysteresis (plastic deformation of fascial tissues that prevents the correct length of muscles).
  • A wide range of pains (headache, cervical pain, arm pain, upper back pain, low back pain, pain in the sacrum, pain in the coccyx, hip pain, knee pain and heel pain).
  • Chronic pain that is neither malignant nor metabolic nor autoimmune (muscular, periarticular and paravertebral pains).
  • Propensity to muscle and joint rigidity of a non-malignant nature (that is not the product of metabolic, genetic and/or congenital disorders).
  • Postural abnormalities (Not of neuropathic, myopathic and/or osteopathic origin, or due to congenital or genetic syndromes).
  • Chronic contractions (not related to degenerative conditions of the spine and joints).
  • Trigger points (Mainly affecting the head, neck and upper extremities).
  • Some stress syndromes (that have not had a good therapeutic response to conventional techniques).
  • Poor execution of simple tasks and activities (Progressive decrease in strength and mobility, which has no neuropathic or genetic origin).
  • Post-cervical whiplash syndromes (mood and sleep disorders, galloping pain and stiffness, all after an accident).
  • Sedentary pain (In patients who have a upper crossed syndrome aggravated by their work and posture).