What does neural therapy have to do with fascia?

The workshop you will soon be attending is the only one of its kind in the world.  As an integrative MD who has been treating chronic pain for over two decades, I have had a unique opportunity to learn from my patients, and my clinic has been a living laboratory that has helped me discover a totally new and important paradigm shift in healthcare.  

The basic idea is simple.  It is an established fact that one of the fundamental causes of pain is sensitized nerves.  A growing body of research points to connective tissue scarring as the culprit.  That is why ultrasound-guided hydrodissection procedures have become so popular.  But the neural therapy concept reveals that these scars can sensitize nerves even without pain.  These hidden lesions can pull or tug on nerves, wrap around them, squeeze or strangle them, inflame them or sensitize them in other ways.

It is well known that neural therapy can resolve symptoms that are far away from, or seemingly unrelated to the injection site. Over years of clinical practice, I have carefully mapped this out, and have found a simple, rational explanation for this in the TCM meridian anatomy of fascia.  You will learn this map, and how to use it.  

More importantly, fascia helps explain how we can use light touch to find interferenc fields.  You see, we cannot feel electricity, but we can feel vibration.  And fascia is made of collagen, a thin fiber that is actually a piezoelectric polymer, turning electrical impulses into palpable vibrations.  

That is why we can use light touch as a muscle test, just like kinesiologists do, to find these hidden lesions, and treat them - with injections, acupuncture needles, lasers and other EMF devices, topical remedies or our hands.  Over decades, I have used this to trace a new and clinically important anatomy of fascia - and I used this map to create the Seekers Method. 

I was humbled and thrilled when my work was so warmly embraced by my peers from around the world.  What you will soon be learning is a framework and a skill set that I expect will take the neural therapy world by storm.  I presented my work to a room filled with all of the leading experts in the world, at the 100-year international congress in Frankfurt, Germany.  

As the president of NAANT, I am bringing these important new insights to the world, and this workshop is another step on that journey.  If you don’t have it already, consider buying a copy of Anatomy Trains by Tom Myers - it is a great introduction to the amazing world of fascia.