If you suffer with headaches, do not let anyone tell you they are "normal." Headaches are far from normal and are aften symptoms of severe underlying problems.
Headaches can result from many conditions. But research has revealed many headaches can be traced to the area of cervical vertebrae [spinal bones of the neck].
Because the neck is extremely mobile, there is constant danger of displacement of one or more of these vertebrae, which may compress and irritate the cervical nerves.
Intermediate causes of headaches include digestive, eliminative, kidney and heart problems; eye problems [chiefly eye strain]; infected tonsils; nerve pressure form spinal conditions involving cervical and other areas of the structural system; and sometimes, though very rare, brain problems. In women, disorders of the reproductive system are often the cause of headaches.
Although popping a pill may seem to be an easy answer to headache pain, it is not. It merely masks the symptom, PAIN; the underlying problem remains. As you become immune to the pain drug, you will require higher doses, which will not stop the pain.
If you are a headache sufferer, the best thing you can do it seek professional help by calling 702-920-6556 for an immediate appointment. There is absolutely no reason for you to suffer for even one more day. Even if you have suffered for years, and visited many types of health specialists without relief, Dr. John G. Florendo can offer the solution that you have been looking for.
Common Types of Headaches
Tension Headaches -
Are the most common type of headache. They are caused by muscle strain, or contraction. The pain is usually located on the forehead or the back of the head and neck. The pain is usually described as a dull ache, or a bandlike sensation surrounding your head as if you were wearing a tight bathing cap.
Usually, these headaches begin gradually and then last a few hours to several weeks. Factors that may trigger them include stress, diet, fatigue and poor posture.
Migraine Headaches -
is a general term and may take many forms. The headache pain occurs when the blood vessels of the head dilate (exapnd) and press on the sensitive nerve endings. Conditions that may trigger migraine headaches include stress, certain foods, fatigure and the menstrual cycle.
The most common type of migrain is called a common migraine. Another type is known as a classic migraine. These headaches are often preceded by an "aura" (unusual visual sensations such as blotches or sparkles) or by sensations of weakness, numbness, or tingling. The victim may also experience nausea, vomiting, cold hands and feets, and a feeling of soreness or exhaustion afterward. Though these headaches are just as sever as the common migraine, they generally do not last as long (24 hours or less).
Cluster Headaches -
are sometimes classified as migraines because the pain is caused by dilation of blood vessels. The name "cluster" describes the way the headaches come in distinct clustered episodes. In other words, you may have a bout of headaches for a week or two and then not experience them again for some time. Attacks usually last 15 to 30 minutes and occur in violent, punishing repetition. More men than women suffer from these headaches, and more sufferers are over 40 years old. Alcohol is a common trigger.
Other Types of Headaches-
To list and describe all the many types of headaches would fill an entire book. Some other types of headaches include those due to Cerival or Neck headaches, dental problems, eye disorders, allergies, and sinuses. Two very serious, though much less common, causes of headaches are brain tumors and inflammation of the membranes covering the brain. This is why it is very important to have a thorough examination to determine the type and source of headache pain.
A headache can be serious and hold you back from every day activities. Before you get to the point of regular pain or worse, schedule an appointment at the Unlimited Wellness Institute with Dr. Florendo at 702-920-6556.
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
Whiplash Pain Is Real, Study Says
A released study now confirms the severity of pain associated with whiplash. A 10-year study in Australia found that facet joint pain was the definitive cause of chronic head and neck pain in 60% of patients suffering from chronic neck pain following motor vehicle whiplash injuries. These findings were published in the journal Spine.
In addition the study showed that 87% exhibited a limited range of cervical motion. Together these findings suggest that many whiplash victims would respond well to chiropractic care since adjustments are specifically directed to the facet joints.
In fact, studies published in the Journal of Manipulation and Physical Therapy showed that chiropractic adjustments can eliminate or reduce joint pain and restore range of motion at the specific level of injury.
Chiropractic for recovery.
Whiplash pain may have more than one cause. Whether your symptoms stem from facet joint pain, muscle strains, or ligament sprains, chiropractic can restore function to the area of injury.
Doctors of chiropractic undergo extensive training in managing strunctural problems. Spinal adjustments help to remove nerve interference, break down scar tissue from old injuries, increase circulation to enhance healing, and reduce inflammation.
Let me help you resume your normal routine -- without pain, without drugs, and without surgery.
-Dr. John G Florendo
Unlimited Wellness Institute
6141 S. Rainbow Boulevard, Suite 115
Las Vegas, NV 89118
Office: (702)920-6556
Fax: (702)920-6555
Email unlimitedwellness@gmail.com for any questions or concerns.
In addition the study showed that 87% exhibited a limited range of cervical motion. Together these findings suggest that many whiplash victims would respond well to chiropractic care since adjustments are specifically directed to the facet joints.
In fact, studies published in the Journal of Manipulation and Physical Therapy showed that chiropractic adjustments can eliminate or reduce joint pain and restore range of motion at the specific level of injury.
Chiropractic for recovery.
Whiplash pain may have more than one cause. Whether your symptoms stem from facet joint pain, muscle strains, or ligament sprains, chiropractic can restore function to the area of injury.
Doctors of chiropractic undergo extensive training in managing strunctural problems. Spinal adjustments help to remove nerve interference, break down scar tissue from old injuries, increase circulation to enhance healing, and reduce inflammation.
Let me help you resume your normal routine -- without pain, without drugs, and without surgery.
-Dr. John G Florendo
Unlimited Wellness Institute
6141 S. Rainbow Boulevard, Suite 115
Las Vegas, NV 89118
Office: (702)920-6556
Fax: (702)920-6555
Email unlimitedwellness@gmail.com for any questions or concerns.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Natural Solutions and Your Diet
Eating tasty foods is one of
the life’s pleasures. But the fact
is the foods that you eat play a major role in your health. Your body has the amazing ability to
turn the foods you eat into the energy it needs to move muscles, regulate
organs, power the brain and aid in healing.
Unfortunately, the food you
eat can also play a major role in common diseases and disrupt the natural healing
process. Many of today’s
convenience foods can place unnatural demands on your body slowing you’re
healing process and depriving your body of essential nutrients, which often
leads to potentially deadly diseases.
Eating well means eating a
variety of foods everyday. But it
also means eating regularly and avoiding excess Kevorkian foods, such as
Pre-Packaged Convenience Foods, High Fat Lunch Meats, Lobster (anthropoid),
Margarine (hydrogenated oil), NutraSweet (methanol alcohol), Junk Food, Olestra
(fat free chips), High Fat Dairy Products, Chlorine (water), Caffeine Products
and Alcohol.
The fact is, learning to eat
well may take time. Many people
have been “trained” to enjoy sweet, salty, and fattening food. All this processed food can taste
great, but its difficult for the body to process and contains very little
nutritional value. The good part
is you don’t have to give up all your favorite foods at once. Try subtle changes and you will find
that over time, each change has become a lasting healthy habit. Healthy food choices include
Fruits, veggies, Fish, Chicken, and Turkey intake less fat; Also 8-10 glasses
of water per day.
While food does play a major
role in a healthy lifestyle, numerous factors contribute to overall
health. When your body works
overtime, it depletes many vitamins and minerals that each cell needs to
function properly. Because of
this, a supplement is often required. Chiropractic also enhances all body
functions, such as digestion and absorption.
For more information on
nutrition or ways to live a healthier life style call us at 702-920-6556 or
email us at unlimitedwellness@gmail.com
Thursday, August 15, 2013
Chiropractic Care For Back Pain Relief
JULY 18, 2013, 12:01 AM
Alternatives for Back Pain Relief
By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS
This column appears in the July 21 issue of The New York Times Magazine.
If you have never suffered from lingering low back pain, you’re lucky or, more likely, young. Up to 80 percent of us will experience low back pain at some point. And for most, there won’t be an identifiable cause.
In the past 10 years, the most popular nonsurgical medical treatment for “chronic, nonspecific” low back pain has been injection therapy, or shots into the lower back of various substances — usually cortisone but also liquid ibuprofen, morphine and vitamin B12. Doctors have been turning to injection therapy at a “disproportionately escalating rate,” according to an overview of back-pain treatments by a team led by Dr. Janna Friedly, a back specialist and an assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine at the University of Washington in Seattle, because it’s relatively easy to administer, less invasive than surgery, can provide some pain relief for a few weeks for some people and is profitable for physicians.
But the benefits do not last, the latest science shows. In a commentary published in May in The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), researchers from the Netherlands point out that there is almost no evidence that the shots ease most people’s pain long term, even after multiple injections. Other recent studies have concluded that injections also do not significantly reduce the likelihood of back surgery later. And in a particularly sobering study published in February, researchers found, to their surprise, that a small group of subjects with pinched nerves in their backs showed less improvement after injection therapy than a control group during a four-year follow-up period. Based on the available data, the JAMA authors conclude, doctors “should not” recommend injection therapy to their patients with chronic low back pain.
The lack of other options that can be administered in a doctor’s office, however, is frustrating to physicians and their patients, says Dr. Friedly. Doctors “want to be able to do something,” she says. But it may be that in their desire to treat back pain, doctors are compounding the problem and creating a disease state where none may exist. “I think we’ve begun pathologizing pain,” she says.
Since most adults develop an aching back at some point, Dr. Friedly says, it shouldn’t always be viewed as an abnormal condition that requires costly medical care. Having some back pain can be a normal aspect of aging that should be met with acknowledgment, patience and, even more important, a change in lifestyle, particularly exercising more.
According to a study published in March, a simple walking program can help adults strengthen their aching backs as much as a more complicated series of back exercises. A comprehensive review published in May in The Clinical Journal of Pain finds that there is “strong evidence for short-term effectiveness” of yoga against back pain, although whether the benefits last beyond a year is less certain. Other experiments have found that Pilates, stretching classes, acupuncture and stationary bicycling each provide some people with some pain relief, although in head-to-head studies, no one of those options is superior to the others.
And perhaps all of them work, to some degree, simply by distracting people. In a 2012 Japanese study, when adults suffering from chronic back pain visited an amusement park, their self-reports of pain dropped significantly, only to climb again as soon as the trip ended.
__________________________________________________
A note from Dr. John Florendo
Chiropractic care is an organic approach to the cause of the pain. All nerves originate at the spine and exit off the cord through foramen or tunnels formed by the spinal column vertebra. A vertebra misaligned to a millimeter can occlude the foramen and cause nerve irritation and disrupt normal messages from the brain to the body. This is a subluxation. Get checked for subluxations regularly to stay healthy.
Special Report: What Is An Adjustment?
What is a Chiropractic Adjustment?
The
chiropractic adjustment is a gentle, yet dynamic thrust applied to a particular
spinal joint in such a way as to generate movement in a specific direction.
Chiropractic adjustments restore proper mechanics of the spine, which enhances
joint function, corrects specific joint problems, and prevents injury due to
improper spinal dynamics. This facet of chiropractic care principally affects
problems that are musculoskeletal in nature. Because of the relationship between
spinal nerves and organ function, the removal of nerve interference by the
correction of spinal fixations and subluxations is thought to enhance many
other areas of general health as well.
How many adjustments will I need?
Applied
repeatedly over a period of time, spinal adjustments can help restore mobility
to even the most chronic spinal fixations. Deep-rooted fixations that have
existed for several years typically require months of care. Fixations of lesser
duration and severity respond in less time. A recent, mild fixation will often
respond in as little as one treatment. Condition never really goes away-only
the symptoms do. As long as the spinal malfunction continues to exist to some
extend, it may undermine body function and health and may ultimately cause
symptoms once again. The best way to prevent recurrence is to continue care
until an appropriate correction has been made.
Sometimes
after progressive degeneration of spinal joints has begun, certain conditions
cannot be totally corrected. Yet chiropractic treatment can improve function
and relieve discomfort if administered regularly.
How often will I need to see my
Chiropractor?
It
is important to remember that spinal fixation is an on going process. The
chiropractor's recommendation for treatment is based on the specific nature and
history of the condition in each case. Chronic, long term fixations and
subluxations may require intensive care for a number of weeks, followed by a
gradually diminishing frequency of care to encourage the changes that are
desired. Acute, painful conditions need to be handled in stages. Most often,
the pain and inflammation of injury must first be treated with ice and other
physiotherapy for a period of time before attempts can be made to correct the
spinal malfunction responsible for the condition. Such acute case management is
typically carried out on a daily basis at first until the symptoms subside and
adjustments can be administered several times a week
Tuesday, August 13, 2013
Weight and Fit of Backpacks
S.O.S Save Our Students….
From Their Backpacks
Some Backpack Facts:
- The Consumer Product Safety
Commission estimates that more than 3,300 children aged 5 to 14 were treated in
emergency rooms last year for injuries related to book bags.
- An Auburn University study
shows heavy backpacks may be a serious threat to spinal development. In their survey sample, the average
pack was 17%of the child’s body weight.
This is the equivalent of a 150 lb. adult carrying a 26 lb. pack. 67.2% of the children studied suffered
muscle soreness, 50.8% back pain, 24.5% numbness and 14.7% shoulder pain. Studies at Johns Hopkins Children
Center also show overloaded backpacks as the cause of shoulder or lower-back
pain and poor posture in kids.
- Back pain in kids is on the
rise. A study published in the
journal spine found 6% of 10 year olds complain of back pain, increasing to
10%-15% for 12 year olds.
- University of Michigan
researchers estimate that up to 60% of children will experience back pain by
the time they reach 18.
- The risk of spinal damage is
such a concern to the Education Ministry in Bangkok, Thailand, that in 1996
they imposed weight limits on book bags after finding that most half of primary
school pupils were carrying bags weighing more than 6 pounds.
- More than 5 million adult
Americans are sidelined from work each year due to chronic back pain. How many of these problems started in
youth?
What can you
do?
Make sure that your child’s
backpack is not harming his/her overall spinal development and posture.
1.
Choose The Right Backpack.
Put as much thought into buying your child’s backpack as you do their
shoes. Assure a good fit. Look for heavily padded shoulder straps
(which should fit snug but not too tight), bags that don’t hang too low down
the back and, ideally, a waist strap.
Avoid packs or bags with a single strap.
2.
Don’t overload the backpack
If the loaded backpack causes the child to lean forward to carry it, it’s
too heavy. This stresses the
spine, which can lead to a lifetime of health problems. For elementary school ages, maximum
weight is 10% of total body weight.
That means that a 50 lb. child should not carry more then 5 pounds. For pre-teens and teens, the maximum
should be 15% to 20% of total body weight. Put heavier items at the top of the pack closest to the body
(to allow the legs to help support the weight).
3.
Lift it Properly.
Face the backpack. Bend at
the knees. Use both hands and
check the weight of the pack. Lift
with the legs. Apply one shoulder
strap and then the other.
4.
Carry it the right way
Use both shoulder straps.
(Make sure kids understand that this means one strap over each
shoulder.) This keeps the pack
close to the body and distributes its weight evenly across the back and
shoulders. Use the waist strap,
too, to distribute some of the weight to the pelvis and hips.
5.
Have your child’s spine
checked, if You’re Wondering.
The consequences of carrying heavy backpacks are not something people
think about until it’s too late.
If you’re wondering about the state of your child’s spine, our office
will be glad to do a complimentary spinal screening. Just call Unlimited Wellness Institute (702)920-6556 to
arrange a convenient time.
Tuesday, August 6, 2013
Special Report on Walking
Walking as an exercise can help relieve tension and enhance
a persons general attitude toward life. Walking is well known as an effective
weight control exercise.
A moderate pace of 4 miles per hour burns approximately 5
calories per minute, or 300 to 400 calories per hour. Taking a brisk walk
before a meal may decrease your appetite.
Walking keeps the body energized and promotes physical
fitness. It is an exercise that benefits:
Heart: Allows the
heart to pump blood more efficiently.
During vigorous and prolonged exercises, such as walking, the heart
beats more rapidly, helping to strengthen the heart muscle. A strong heart
muscle can help lower high blood pressure and reduce the risk of heart attack
or stroke.
Lungs: Helps the
lungs develop a greater capacity. Eases breathing and improves the entire
respiratory system.
Muscles: Helps
tone muscles in legs, thighs, and abdomen.
Bones:
Strengthens bones, enhances physical endurance, and improves balance. Walking
can help retard bone loss-osteoporosis-which is especially important for women
and older adults.
Blood: Walking
causes calf muscles to contract, increasing circulation.
Getting Started
Set a goal for the pace you would like to achieve, but start
slowly. Take your pulse during each walk to determine your heart rate: Put the
first and second fingers of your right hand on the radial artery of the inner
wrist of your left hand. Count the
number of beats in 6 seconds and multiply by 10 (equals heart beats per
minute.) Take your pulse 5 minutes into your walk, and again just before you
end your walk.
Do not expect to walk 10 miles the first time out. Start
slowly. Walking, like any vigorous exercise, requires moderation until the body
has built up some stamina.
Begin by walking at a relaxed pace for 10 minutes, working
up to 20 minutes every other day at a brisk pace. After you have been walking
briskly for 20 minutes 3 days a week for 1 month, increase your walking time to
30 minutes. Repeat 30-minute walks 4 or 5 times a week.
Do’s and Don’ts
Wear comfortable, lightweight, and flexible shoes with
sufficient arch support and cushioning for the bottom of your feet.
- Do allow one-fourth to one-half inch of space
between the longest toe and the tip of the shoe. This will give your feet room
to expand while walking.
- Don’t wear shoes made of material that prevents
your feet from “breathing.” The best shoe materials are leather, canvas, and
nylon mesh
- Don’t ignore the elements when walking outdoors.
In summer, wear a hat or visor to protect your head and face from the sun. light
colored, loose-fitting clothes are best in hot weather. In winter, wear several
layers of clothing to trap heat between layers.
- Before setting off on the days walk, be sure to
warm up first. Walk slowly for
about 5 minutes and then gradually build up your exercise pace. Starting slowly allows the bodies
temperature, pulse rate, and respiratory rate to increase gradually, reducing
the chance of injury.
- After each days walk, examine feet for red spots
and tenderness that could signal the beginning of a blister. Cover with
moleskin to help prevent further irritation. Never pop a blister; it can become
infected.
- If you feel heel pain or discomfort in the knees
and lower back, it could be the result of pressure exerted on these areas when
walking on hard surfaces without proper cushioning in your shoes. This pressure is called food shock and
can be alleviated with insoles.
Remember to cool down after a vigorous workout or long brisk
walk. Blood tends to pool in the
legs after exercise and can deprive the body of much-needed oxygen. A gradual
cool down, including a slow 3 to 5 minute walk and stretching, will help pump
blood back up to the body where it is needed.
If you would like to learn more about enhancing your
lifestyle and well being through walking, or if you have any questions about
the information please call Unlimited Wellness Institute 702-920-6556
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