QuestionI suffer from headaches/lightheaded feeling for many years till 3 months ago my Doctor tested my B12 level. It was at 90 and I currently take injections daily. This is the result of having stomach surgery years ago. The headaches/lightheaded feeling has not gone away completely due to many years of being deficient, is what I am told. I have heard that it can last up to a year or more even with the B12 injections. Will chiropractic care speed the recovery? A friend suggested I inquire since my health care provider covers it.
AnswerDear Todd Rauch,
Thank you for your question about headaches and B12 injection therapy. Yours is an inquiry similar to those I have heard from others who are investigating chiropractic. Unfortunately, though, it is based on some misconceptions. In order to answer you properly, I'll first need to give you some background on anatomy and physiology and how they relate to the chiropractic profession. I'll then offer my thoughts on how this may relate to the matter you describe.
There are two branches or schools of thought in chiropractic. Briefly, they are differentiated by whether they deal with the limited therapeutic approach for aches and pains (commonly termed "mixed" chiropractic because it represents a mixture of a chiropractor with a non-chiropractic matter) or a non-therapeutic approach to optimum body performance (termed "straight" chiropractic because there is no mixing of chiropractic with anything else). My expertise is in non-therapeutic straight chiropractic.
Therapeutic "mixed" chiropractic is the older approach based on a split from the founding principles of chiropractic about a century ago.
Non-therapeutic "straight" chiropractic is the more modern of the two. It deals with a particular, common situation called a vertebral subluxation. The spine is made of many bone segments which house and protect the spinal cord and the smaller spinal nerve branches that come off the spinal cord and exit between the bones. These nerve pathways carry information or messages between the brain and the cells of the body. These messages are essential for the life of the cells. Without brain messages, the cells immediately begin the process of dying; i.e., they can no longer function the way they should to maintain life.
Because the bones are moveable, they can misalign in such a way as to interfere with the messages and, ultimately, the ability of the person to function at their best or express their optimum potential. People with vertebral subluxations are not able to get all they can out of life.
Vertebral subluxations can be caused by a wide variety of factors, what we'll generally call stresses. These stresses can be physical (such as accidental trauma, sleeping posture, pillow and mattress condition, the birth process, sneezing, falling down, etc.), mental / emotional (in its many forms, probably the most familiar use of the word stress), or chemical (such as pollution, drugs, etc.), which are, unfortunately, regular parts of daily living for all age groups. In short, a vertebral subluxation can occur for a multitude of reasons.
Tragically, vertebral subluxations are rarely obvious to the individual they affect. They usually have no symptoms. The reason is that most of what goes on inside you happens without your awareness. As an example, try to "feel" your liver. What's it doing right now? You can't know, so you can't know if it's functioning at its best or something less. To complicate things, nerve pathways that carry messages of control (termed "motor" nerves) have no way of transmitting ache or pain messages, so your body function may be far from perfect and you'd not have any alerting signal whatsoever. The branching of the nerve pathways is complex and extensive, making it exceedingly difficult to predict or determine exactly how the person will be affected. For this reason alone, it is impossible for anyone to give you reliable answers as to a connection between spinal or nerve function and the various sensations or functions which may occur in someone's life, such as your concerns, headaches or vitamin metabolism. Certainly, every part of the body must have connections to the nerve system so that vital information may be transmitted between the brain and the cells. There are some who would attempt to review the possible nerve connections between a nerve root and specific organs or tissues, but this ignores the multitude of variables that determine the expression of function. The question of how one's individual body carries out the myriad of activities just to maintain life is enormous and would require your Creator's (or creator's, for the agnostic) knowledge, or at least far more than our limited, educated knowledge of the complexities of life.
In order to know if someone has a vertebral subluxation, it is necessary to have that person's spine checked by a non-therapeutic straight chiropractor using a method of "analysis." When a vertebral subluxation is detected this way, it is obviously important to correct it as soon as possible.
Since vertebral subluxations are caused by so many different things, people choose to go to a non-therapeutic straight chiropractor on a regular basis to enjoy the most time free of the life-robbing effects of vertebral subluxation. There's a saying that straight chiropractic is not about your back, it's not about your pain, it's about your life. Each person has a unique potential in life. With vertebral subluxation, it's impossible to realize that potential.
Now that you have more information about the body and vertebral subluxation, how do you make use of it? Well, first understand that this is not an explanation of how someone should deal with headaches or vitamin therapies. There may be many reasons as to why symptoms or conditions may occur, but pinning them down or naming them is not relevant to the matter of whether you would benefit from being free of vertebral subluxations. The short answer to your question is, yes, non-therapeutic straight chiropractic can benefit you, not as a treatment but in ways that you may not have considered. There is no procedure in non-therapeutic straight chiropractic for treating headaches or as vitamin therapy. Vertebral subluxation is, in and of itself, detrimental to life. As we've seen, it is not valid or reliable to try to connect it to a symptom or an organ or tissue condition.
A key question to ask for your purposes, then, would be, Is someone with headaches and receiving vitamin injections better off with vertebral subluxation / nerve interference or free of subluxation / with the nerve channels open? It is easy to see that having all the available nerve messages getting through is better than only some of them getting through, regardless of the person's situation otherwise.
As I mentioned earlier, not all chiropractors adhere to this and it is important that you be able to distinguish which ones do if you're going to seek this type of service, certainly well beyond whether it is recommended by your friend or your plan. You need to understand very clearly that the practice objectives of therapeutic mixed chiropractic and non-therapeutic straight chiropractic are quite different, as described above. What information I give you must not be interpreted from the mixed viewpoint. Non-therapeutic straight chiropractic is not about the things you listed (headaches or vitamin injections) at all.
All that said, it would certainly be wise to have your spine checked for subluxations by a non-therapeutic straight chiropractor, even if you still elect to have therapeutic attention for other concerns. Remember, the two objectives are not the same.
If you are interested in finding out how to locate a non-therapeutic straight chiropractor in your area or if you have any other questions, please contact me at this site again or at
[email protected]. You may also visit www.gschiro.com, a site that represents non-therapeutic straight chiropractic organizations on a state level.
Todd, I wish you the best in understanding what chiropractic has to offer. It has been my pleasure to provide you with some information.
Sincerely,
James W. Healey, D.C.