Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
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Hi!
We're back.
Did you get some sleep?
Yes, not as much as my three days of no
(00:23):
sleep but I'm getting caught up slowly.
Getting caught up.
We get to talk about that, right?
Yes, I would like to share that because for
so many reasons I was grateful to have the
knowledge for all the scary stories that we share.
There's a reason why we share the scary stories.
Yeah, I thought you might want to say something about that.
(00:46):
We can jump right into it if you want.
I know you always tell us stories.
Friday, no, Saturday morning my daughter woke up.
My 14 year old daughter woke up with,
which looked like bursitis, acute bursitis.
And for hockey players olecranon bursitis is very common.
There's not a lot of padding, as
we all know, on the olecranon.
It doesn't take much to traumatize that little bursa.
(01:10):
She had no pain.
She played a hockey game Saturday.
And we taped her up and thought, whatever.
Saturday.
Late afternoon, evening, she started to not feel well.
She had chills which is not like her.
She's my kid that runs hot all the time.
And then Sunday morning she woke up with a, I think I
(01:33):
sent you the picture, a very scary looking red face.
I don't want to say rash, but presentation on the elbow.
So the big acute inflammatory bursa was gone.
Her arm was very swollen and
had this very angry looking red.
(01:55):
Diffuse.
Yes.
Red.
Yes.
And it, for me, when you showed me the picture,
Yeah.
the only reason I knew what that was as soon as I saw it was
the red flag pictures that David Musnick has in the core.
(02:18):
Red flag, this rash.
And it's that looks like a little rash.
How bad could that be?
And when, so that's how I knew that it was scary.
Yep.
And so we went right to urgent care and I chose the
urgent care near us that had labs and imaging there.
And it was so funny because the urgent
(02:40):
care doc came in and saw her elbow.
And his eyes got really big and he says,
okay, good call for bringing her here.
But you have two choices.
You can go to this hospital or you can go to
that hospital, but you have to go to one of
those and you have to go to those right now.
And I will call ahead and let you know that you're coming.
(03:02):
And I'm like okay.
So trying to be super calm.
My daughter's what's going on?
My elbow.
What's that thing?
He felt totally fine.
Although it felt very hot to her.
So people who are listening and watching if you're putting
your diagnoses together We could play a little game and
you could throw it out in the chat what you think it is.
And I know it's hard for not seeing it, but
(03:24):
obviously they were concerned of an infection.
So we went to the hospital of choice.
And triaged and got her in right away.
I have nothing but good things to say about UCSF.
That's the hospital that we chose.
Within minutes we had an orthopedic team in there.
We also had the pediatric team in there.
(03:47):
And between the two of them figuring out versus the
acute bursitis versus the presentation of cellulitis.
how to treat, what to do, did x rays, orthopedic was
like, it could be soft tissue, so just the cellulitis,
or he was worried that the infection could have
been further already progressed into the bone, so
(04:08):
imaging was required, labs so I spent, What's that?
I like these people.
They were I guess I can't say enough
good things about the facility.
Thank you, UCSF Children's Hospital, Oakland
for taking such great care of us for three days.
We got home last night.
So it was intravenous antibiotics pushed every eight hours
(04:30):
and labs taken every day to make sure inflammatory markers
were coming down, white blood cell counts were going back
up again, down again down and of course I didn't sleep.
No and that's normal for a mom.
And it's also because of the scary
stories that we hear and talk about.
That was one thing I got across the
(04:51):
board from the orthopedic team was.
Good job recognizing that as fast as you
did, because this gets ugly very quickly.
Yeah it's just a hop, skip, and
a jump from cellulitis to sepsis.
Right.
And to recognize it that quickly.
(05:12):
It's, I'm for everybody that makes it through
this, the last half of the core on Sunday
afternoon, I pause on the cellulitis slides,
and I can give you new slides now to show
the stages of cellulitis and how quickly
it responds when it's in the right hands.
Yeah.
So yeah, thank you to Dr.
Musnick for that slide.
(05:33):
All of the talks that we give on these things,
and also just listening to your inner voice, the
little bird on your shoulder that says, this is bad.
Or, I know this isn't not bad.
Yes.
Doesn't look like this.
There is nothing orthopedic that looks like this.
(05:57):
So whatever it is not orthopedic and is bad.
One of the questions was, did they wash it out?
There is no open wound.
There is nothing, she didn't even have a hangnail.
So when we were talking about
how did she get this infection?
It doesn't have to be from an open wound.
It comes right through the skin and the
(06:19):
orthopedics team says it loves olecranon bursitis.
That bursa gets traumatized and
all the bacteria are like, Yes!
Let's go right to that joint.
So it's very common apparently with olecranon bursitis.
And the other thing I know about
cellulitis is there's a source someplace.
(06:42):
So I had a colleague or a friend who got
cellulitis in the middle of his tib anterior.
Just no, no breakage of the skin, no scrape in the skin.
It's just all of a sudden he's got
this raised lump and this red rash.
(07:06):
And I said, Michael what tooth do you have infected?
This one.
So the next step for her is a 3d cone beam just to
make sure because heliolitis doesn't come from space.
So I will say that hockey players have disgusting pads.
(07:26):
They don't get washed and disinfected hardly at all.
And they're thrown on the floor of disgusting locker rooms.
Staff is very prevalent in locker rooms and in gyms.
And It seems to be the perfect storm.
We do, like I said, we see this with hockey
players a ton just because it's just foul.
(07:47):
Okay.
So this was a big reminder to all the teenagers
that we know in our family to hang up your gear
and spray it with something and disinfect it.
You're not immune just because
you're a teenager or a young adult.
The skin barrier should keep The infection out, right?
Why didn't it?
(08:07):
What's her vitamin D levels?
Yeah.
So then I had three days watching my daughter on an IV.
So I had lots of time on my hands
to play with slides, read logos.
I had all the ideas I was sending you.
I'm like clearly the universe needs for me to sit
for three days and Off I went and I was so grateful
to our FSM hive for ideas of was she deficient?
(08:31):
Is she stressed?
She was just getting over a cold.
She also got the bottom half of
her braces off two days before.
So urgent care doctor had seen
that in her chart and he's I won.
What was her mouth bleeding?
Was something, when did they put the new retainer in?
The mouth is like the fastest portal for
(08:53):
When I get my teeth cleaned, because I've had
both of my hips replaced and because I've had open
heart surgery, I have to take 500 milligrams of
amoxicillin two hours before I get my teeth cleaned.
That's because the gums and the blood supply in the
(09:14):
mouth, as Mary Ellen says, the mouth goes everywhere,
right?
And so that was the other thing that I was thinking
about was going from urgent care to the UCSF
emergency department that they had called ahead.
And it was so funny.
With from urgent care, they like ushered us out
this back door that led right to the parking lot.
(09:36):
It was like, do not pass go, do not collect 200.
Go right to the emergency department right now.
And the urgent care doctor, he was so
young, but enthusiastic that we go.
And I said, listen, I understand the severity of this.
This is why we're here.
I go, I actually chose this urgent care
because of the labs and the imaging.
(09:56):
And he said, you need something faster than us.
And I said, okay, good.
Done.
Got it.
Got it.
Check.
And he said, right away I saw on her
chart that she had her braces off.
And I was thinking, wow, it's amazing how
technology had linked her orthodontics to her.
So at one press of a button, they could see everything.
And her mouth was bleeding.
(10:17):
They were really flossing and aggressively digging in there.
And as soon as I thought of that, I thought of Dr.
Chalmers talking about the first talk that I
ever saw her give was on failed root canals.
And so this was forever ago and I almost didn't go,
this was back when the advanced had two tracks they're
all functional and practical or physical medicine.
(10:42):
And thank goodness I gravitated to her talk because she
was talking about how mouth inflammation is everywhere.
And if your mouth is inflamed or if there's an infection,
you're just on a very basic level of energy and Dr.
Rob DeMartino talks about that
term like energy deficit, right?
All the time.
(11:03):
If your body is busy fighting infection
and inflammation in your mouth, and it
doesn't have stores to fight it elsewhere.
So that was the first thing I thought.
It could have been a host of different things.
She was just coming off of a normal virus, the mouth,
whatever, just playing a hockey game, your attacks, like
who knows where the bacteria came from, but it was scary.
(11:26):
Do you know what our vitamin D levels are?
No, I don't think they had tested that on her.
She just had routine blood work and everything was perfect.
Her pediatrician is great.
She said her baritone was a little low, still
in the normal range, but for an athlete,
a young athlete, it should be much higher.
So she was just starting to supplement with iron.
(11:48):
But, I'd be interesting to see what, and I'm sure it's low.
Well, vitamin D is not routine anymore,
and insurance companies stopped paying
for it because it's low on everybody.
Except for me, thanks to Dr.
Sosnowski, mine is apparently high and I should stop.
But the functional medicine people are like, nope,
it's not high, it's where it should be, yeah,
(12:09):
60 to 90.
If your vitamin D levels are between 60 and 90, your
risk of heart disease and cancer goes down by 50%.
5 0?
5 0.
Wow.
Heart disease and cancer.
And the risk of infection is low.
(12:31):
So somebody who's had COVID six times, the
first thing you test, Is vitamin D it's and
somebody was cellulitis from dirty hockey pads.
And even if insurance doesn't cover
it, it's the best 70 you'll ever spend.
Oh, absolutely.
But I'm so glad she's better.
(12:51):
Those were scary pictures.
I know.
And
I say that we're loosely benched that I got
to sleep on for three days and was Great.
It's not the first.
Did they give you a
recliner?
I thought you were in a recliner.
It was actually a bench that's
built into the wall by the window.
So it was enough for me to stretch out.
But when I get, and maybe you can explain this.
(13:13):
This was going to be one of my questions.
When I am stressed, I get cold.
Cold that I cannot warm up and I just start trembling.
It did not kill to the bone and it didn't help that
I was confined to a hospital room where I couldn't.
Not only could I not run for three
(13:34):
days, but I couldn't barely move.
My exercise was running down, getting
a coffee at 6am and coming back up.
So I think you had just texted.
I was sitting there with like my winter
jacket on and I asked the nurse for another
blanket and I had my cashmere sweater on.
I couldn't stay warm for three days.
Yeah.
It was.
And then you're like run concussion on yourself.
(13:54):
I'm like, you're right.
Enough about you kid back to me now.
Yeah, exactly.
You got to take care of the caregivers.
And so every night we just taught a core of this last week.
And as soon as I get to the concussion protocol,
run it on yourself at least three times a week, but
(14:17):
at least every night, and it helps with the chill.
Yeah,
Harry talks about people getting chilled.
Yes.
And yeah, what's up with that?
I don't know, but like the words, and it's, this is
actually a very interesting segue for us because Ever
since you would talk about Abrams and Van Gelder and
(14:39):
all these osteopaths and the way that they speak, and
we know how poetic literally, some of the phrasing is.
I just, I have a special place in my heart for words.
I love English and maybe that's why I fell in love
with FSM so much because words are so important.
(15:00):
Thank you.
And pattern recognition is so important.
And so when I can use pattern recognition
with words, it's like my love language.
Many years ago, when I put together the first frozen
shoulder talk, I started gathering all this research
because of using words like adhesive capsulitis and
(15:20):
constriction in the capsule and congestion in the capsule.
And I have a couple of slides from Dr.
Codman, who in 1934, he was a doctor that
first came up with the term frozen shoulder
and use the term adhesive capsulitis.
So in Troutdale, the last sports
course, I was talking about Dr.
(15:40):
Codman like crazy because I researched him and his
descriptions of the shoulder are Shakespearean.
So one of the practitioners found me.
This was Codman's very first edition of the
shoulder rupture of the supraspinatus tendon
and other in or about the subacromial bursa.
(16:03):
His Descriptions and pictures.
Reads like a novel.
Hence the word, Codman's Exercises.
The dangly ones, where you do a pendulum.
To stretch the capsule and give everybody
room to breathe and bring circulation.
Yes.
Sweet!
So now that I have my grubby little hands on
(16:24):
this and it, I wish you all could smell it.
It just smells like an old Yes!
Yes!
Thank you so much to that person who's very
special to send me the first edition of this book.
But the language, the one of the words that Dr.
Codman keeps using over and over again is communication.
(16:45):
How different structures communicate
and when they can't communicate.
dysfunction arises.
And I just thought what a beautiful way of looking at
what we do with frequency because I feel like so many
people will say, Oh, it just feels like it flows together.
I feel more connected.
(17:06):
And maybe that's what Part of cell signaling is
all about is the communication between cells.
So from like a doctor who talks about his first Grey's
Anatomy book, he talks about his copy is from 1867.
Wow.
Communication.
Yeah.
Seeger's second paper talked about just the
(17:32):
current increases cellular transduction.
That's communication.
Which I always think of as communication, transduction.
Right.
That's just the current.
Increases the flow, and then Jerry
Pollack is coming to the symposium.
Did he find his computer?
(17:54):
He must have figured it out because he said yes.
Oh, good.
No, I don't think he found it.
Somebody stole it.
Oh, I'm glad that he said yes.
He found a backup.
And
if you think about the, his first book,
which is what I asked him to talk about.
Cells, the engines of life.
(18:15):
He talks about the fact that the cell has a matrix where
all the water molecules are bound and they flicker.
Making every cell into a semiconductor and then
you graduate from that book to the fourth phase
of water where there's a linear flow of water
(18:38):
or serum along the edge of the blood vessels.
The water is organized.
There's cellular transduction here, and the body
conducts current and information in this organized field.
It's why I have Jerry keep coming back.
(19:01):
Yes.
So
What you just said, if I'm going to break down a
definition of Conduction, and you said another word,
Transduction that's all part of communication, like
you and I are communicating as we are transducing
information, through our two fields right now.
(19:23):
I can't wait to, I just got my hands on it last night.
And it reads like a novel.
He talks about cases.
He talks about why aren't textbooks
written like that anymore?
And the language they used in the thirties.
It is like Harry's books and the medical books
(19:44):
Abrams wrote in the teens, twenties, thirties.
The language is very poetic.
It's beautiful.
It's different.
Yes.
The illustrations are like some hand scribblings.
He's got photos in there.
I just can't wait to put it into some slides to updo
(20:05):
or, and you think about, we're all about like new
information, new technology new, there's space for
going back and just not overcomplicating things.
Like the structure of the glenohumeral
joint has not changed in a hundred years.
No.
We have the same ball and socket
that we did a hundred years ago.
(20:27):
We have the ability to image it with the MRI and ultrasound,
right?
But the structure and the function is still the same.
And I think it's a lot of times.
Yes.
Imaging is fantastic and it definitely helps tell the whole
story, but there's so many times where the imaging doesn't.
(20:52):
match the presentation for the good or for the bad.
Sometimes somebody is an excruciating pain and their
physical exam is horrible and their images are great.
And sometimes their images are terrible
and they're completely asymptomatic.
So I think going back and just hearing his exam, like
(21:12):
what he was doing in the exam and the presentation and
it's just,
it's just, I think it's a lot more clinically
relevant than reading an MRI report sometimes.
If you're brave enough, can you bring the book to Phoenix?
Okay.
Because that's the next time I'm going to see you.
Oh, and you know what I did today?
(21:32):
I went and picked the Speaker Awards.
Oh I know you love doing that.
It's like your Christmas shopping.
It's every year there's, oh,
let's see, we did that one before.
That one's too big.
This one's, oh, this is just perfect.
Yay.
And for those of you who don't maybe know the
speaker awards are not, and don't get me wrong.
(21:54):
I love my plaques and I have two of them.
But a lot of times you give a talk and you get,
piece of paper.
That you probably wouldn't even frame.
If they give you the cheap frame, maybe.
Sometimes they frame it in a little
plastic 5 frame and you go, yeah, okay.
Thanks.
Yeah.
But I want our awards to be special
because I think our speakers are special.
(22:14):
And you can see on, in the background there, I
have this beautiful vase too, like with glass.
Like these are just things that are pieces of art really.
And you've got the plaque that has envoy on it.
One year, I had them engrave the whole poem.
On advanced for the advanced speakers.
(22:36):
That was so cool today.
It's like show and tell got to show and
tell the horrific story my past three
days and show some great things that I am.
And thank god for antibiotics.
So sometimes there are people that
want to fix everything with FSM.
Yeah.
And to those people, I would like to say in all
(22:58):
sincerity, there is a reason God invented ANSEF and
Augmentin and Olenia for parasites and Mobendazole.
Yes.
Reason is to keep you from getting dead.
So I was on antibiotics for six years because of a jaw
infection that ate through to the floor of my sinus.
(23:20):
I swear, people said, Oh, aren't
you worried about your microbiome?
And it's every time I get a bacterial
infection, it goes to my heart.
And I end up in the OR, so no, my
microbiome is going to be just fine.
(23:43):
The infection is more dangerous than if my gut
needs healing, I can give it butyrate directly.
There's a thing.
Think we, we have to keep circumventing back
to the word FSM is a amazing adjunct, right?
And you've never said it use this instead of that.
We use FSM together with, right?
(24:05):
I would never say use FSM instead of exercise or use FSM
instead of manual therapy or mobilization some other way.
What's beautiful about it is that it doesn't,
so many people will ask can I use it with this?
I'm like, of course, like when we're with a NHL locker
room, it was used with four other modalities all at once.
(24:28):
And it all works amazing together.
Yeah.
So yes we're treating my daughter,
but I was very happy for the IV.
Yes.
And I just put together a presentation for Katarzyna
in Poland, because she's going to a physical
therapy conference and giving a lecture about FSM.
(24:50):
And there's one slide that says frequency specific
microcurrent is a Tool that does something you didn't
think was possible is a tool you didn't know you needed
that does something you didn't think was possible.
Wow.
And it makes everything you do more efficient.
(25:13):
More effective, less expensive.
And it's,
that's, and yes, you, it makes everything you do
with your hands and with exercise therapy possible.
How do you exercise a muscle that's adhered to a nerve?
How do you exercise a muscle that
has a partial thickness tendon tear?
(25:35):
You don't.
How offline for 20 years?
And you have a partial thickness tendon tear
that you tore five weeks ago and now you're going
to try and strengthen that muscle and there's
still a partial thickness tendon tear or there's
the memory of a partial thickness tendon tear.
Right.
And the brain says, no.
(25:58):
No you can't exercise that muscle
and
it inhibits it.
And we run 124 and 77.
And as the, we just came off of five day core.
And as the practitioner says the back of the
shoulder, I said, feel that any, that little Dip
(26:18):
run 124 and 77 and in 30 minutes, see what happens.
And she said it filled in.
Am I hallucinating that?
No.
Yeah.
Now try externally rotating the show.
Oh,
it works.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, that is like the best feeling.
(26:38):
I love convincing the, did that just
happen or am I feeling that right?
I'm like, no, that, and that's what makes the in person
and practical weekends just such an exciting place of
learning because you don't understand that when you're
watching a lecture on zoom but when you're not only
watching it happen, but when you're feeling it, I think.
(27:02):
All those experiences just make you a better practitioner.
Yeah, exactly.
You had two very special people at the course.
One of my favorite FSM practitioners from Calgary, Dr.
Nenshi was there.
She's amazing.
I love her.
And I think Dr.
Burke was there.
Was he not?
And Dr.
(27:22):
Burke was there.
We had so much fun.
And Alma and Dr.
Burke were like brother and sister.
And she took him off in the other room.
And it's a combination of FSM and muscle testing and
kinesiology and things she's learned in acupuncture and
(27:44):
things that she's learned in her neuroscience courses.
And she puts them all together and
it's like, how did you do that?
Yeah, it's really fun.
She's the sister from another mister.
I know she was it's just yeah very amazing
practitioner, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
You are lucky to have Dr.
(28:04):
Nenshi there.
Should we answer questions?
I was just about to say I've got the halfway alarm going.
So let's find them.
Have any answer to this question on the webinar and
blah, blah, blah, any reports of individuals who
claim they're sensitive to EMFs and report a negative
(28:25):
reaction to FSM, especially a lasting reaction.
FSM is not EMF.
Radio waves?
Cell phones, TV towers, those are what we think of as EMFs.
FSM is not EMF.
(28:46):
So the lasting negative reaction is probably
because you didn't do a vestibular screen on them.
That's, it has come up in this class, we had
six, fifteen, sixteen people in this class.
(29:06):
Half the class, seven people, had B.
I.
V.
S.
scores over 30.
How many?
Half.
Wow.
Seven out of 15, which is almost half.
Yeah.
And, We did tuning fork exam on some of them, we did
(29:29):
fields of gaze, but I just passed the BIVSS out to
the whole class and there were 41, 44, 56, 32, 26, the
lowest score we had was 26, and they all had a BIVSS.
Classic symptoms.
(29:50):
None of them had prism glass.
One of them had prison glasses, but they were made wrong.
We had wicked wind coming down
the gorge, beautiful sunshine.
The outside temperature was 34, but it feels
like 20, because of the windchill, the negative
(30:10):
reaction to FSM especially if it's lasting, usually
comes from using the concussion protocol, which
makes sense unless you have a vestibular injury.
So patients that think they're sensitive to EMFs, I have to,
(30:30):
I hate to be the world's worst skeptic, but we are engulfed.
There's 1, 200 plus cell phone
towers within a mile of my house.
There is no place where I am not surrounded by EMFs.
(30:51):
And that's different than having the head of your
bed in between a wall that has Wires coming into
the wall and you're surrounded by 60 cycle wall
print and the magnetic field that goes with it.
These are people that have symptoms that they
(31:13):
ascribe or have been told are due to EMFs.
And it's like any other diagnosis that people walk in with.
What else could it be?
So you check for concussion, you check the B.
I.
V.
S., you check for brain injuries,
you check their vitamin D levels.
(31:33):
So what are the symptoms from B.
E.
M.
F.?
Brain fog, anxiety, depression.
That's the vagus.
Has anybody checked them for dental infections?
Has
anybody asked them when they got vaccinated?
Has anybody asked them when did they get COVID?
Has anybody asked them about head injuries?
(31:56):
It's really easy to say that my symptoms are from
something I can't escape and I can't get over.
Therefore, I'm screwed.
No.
It's, they're, look for something else.
And the lasting reaction, the only negative reaction
(32:17):
I know about is Polarizing the spinal cord will
give you pain in between your shoulder blades
and a headache that'll last two or three days.
But when you run 94 on somebody that
has inner ear injury, it can last weeks,
nausea, disequilibrium, that sort of thing.
(32:40):
Okay, you want to take Suzanne's?
Question concerns treating burn survivors.
Are there any differences how you would use frequencies
with atrophic, hypertrophic, and keloid burn scars?
Are there any of these scar tissues contraindicated for FSM?
Are there any special consideration settings for these?
I believe you have a section of
(33:01):
burn in the core, do you not?
So atrophic scars are where the skin just got eaten away.
And the muscle tissue underneath is gone.
That's called a full thickness, third degree burn.
They tend to fill in with connective tissue
or they've had skin grafts and they take.
(33:25):
Skin off like the thigh or the back
and they graft it onto the arm.
So it's thicker.
It's a different kind of skin and
graft scar in a very particular way.
So the 50 eights, 13, and they get hard.
And when you think of 13, you have to think in layers.
(33:50):
You're not going to get the skin to look normal.
Your goal is to improve range of motion.
So what creates range of motion?
Scarring in the connective tissue, scarring
in the blood supply, the capillaries,
and especially scarring in the nerve.
And even skin grafts have or collect subcutaneous fat.
(34:17):
So sclerosis in the adipose.
is the thing, but scarring in the nerves sometimes with
full thickness burns the nerve gets trapped in scar tissue.
And I was sitting with a patient with The burn
(34:40):
doc, the head of the burn unit at Mercy St.
John's at, yeah, Mercy St.
John's in Springfield and there was this quarter sized burn
on this guy's arm and patient, I'm sitting there working
on the scar tissue and I said, what makes this itch?
(35:01):
And he said, oh, it's central.
And I went, okay.
So the patient's up reading a newspaper
and talking to us and listening to us.
And I ran when he said it's central, I ran 40 and 89.
And the patient fell asleep.
(35:22):
And the doc said, did you do that?
I went, yeah, how did you do that?
I treated the frequency for central sensitization.
So it's basically a thalamic representation
for this much skin on his arm.
(35:44):
And I said, do you want him to wake up?
And he said, yeah.
Can you do that?
And I went, so I ran 49 and 90, and 6.
8 and 38, and he went, bleck.
And the doctor looked at me like I was a witch, and
I said, just raised my eyebrows, and I went back
(36:05):
to 40 and 89, and the patient fell asleep again.
That's weird.
And it's no, it's what happens when you
treat the right thing with the right thing.
Right.
We couldn't fix it because you can't run 40 and 89
all the time, but treating burn scars are really easy.
You have to tell the patient ahead of
(36:27):
time, your skin's not going to look normal,
but you're going to be able to move it.
And it may or may not be a one visit fix.
So
that's pretty cool.
And nothing contraindicated, right?
No contraindications.
Really, not any that I've seen.
And we've seen 80 percent full thickness burns with the
(36:52):
foot stuck at 90 degrees because he was standing up and
wearing sneakers and all of his clothes caught fire.
The only thing that wasn't burned
was his face and his hands.
It was in Taiwan.
He had a fireworks went off and
caught all his clothes on fire.
It was the thing.
(37:12):
And then there was the burn study in Springfield.
That was amazing.
I think for the most part, we see burn Cases
many years after scarring has set in and I found
it's extremely beneficial for manual therapy.
It makes the scar just so much more pliable.
(37:37):
Oh, the other thing is 217 and 91, the skin gets hard.
And I don't know the mechanism, but
I know that 91 and 217 work on a
right?
Yes.
And my old friend, 49 and 142, the vitality to the fascia
(37:59):
afterwards and increasing secretions to, you're never
going to go wrong with running that in traumatizing.
You have to
finish with that.
Yes.
Yeah, it's like you take out the
bad stuff, put in the good stuff.
Although, I do talk about it at the Sports
Advanced, when you can put in the good before
(38:20):
taking out the bad but that's the thing.
Take your choice.
Yeah.
See what works.
That's the take home message, is
Do it and see what happens, right?
It's the response to FSM is what
teaches you what really works.
Yes.
And you learn by doing it.
(38:43):
And your objective outcome.
So yes, we feel for smush and we want to have
that increased thixotropic change of a fascial
response, range of motion is your objective finding.
So when you're not sure if it's smushing, retest
with range of motion and that will also tell you
very quickly when you're unsure and then you can
(39:03):
document that and you could write a case report.
Just saying.
Presented at
the symposium.
There's
12 of them.
The whole afternoon.
The morning are the plenary speakers on both days.
Julianna Martinson and who's the other one?
And then Christy Hughes.
(39:24):
On Saturday and Jerry Pollack and
no, I didn't bring the schedule up.
And then the afternoon is all case reports and it's
the case reports where we learn so much and it's
the case reports that turn into published papers.
Oh, my God, Walter.
(39:46):
Gregory finally feels better, whatever.
We got the scleroderma paper finished, and
he's given it to Francesco, and there is a
scleroderma journal that's specific to scleroderma.
(40:07):
Walter always pushes the boundaries.
So we have all the published stuff that
creates the background for what we did.
He found, in the subsequent cases that
he did, that their Raynaud's got better.
And so he took Roger Villica's unpublished
(40:30):
cases and put that presentation in.
So now it's going, if it gets accepted, it's going
to be published as part of the scleroderma paper.
Roger presented that in 2013.
And I said, can I publish it?
(40:50):
And he said, absolutely.
That was 11 years ago, and I still haven't published
it, and Walter just found out that it worked, and
then Dave Burke found out that using 81 and 62 and
vitality in the arteries just made the hands go from
(41:14):
white in Raynaud's to pink and warm, like in minutes.
Wow.
I'm going to try that next time I go to Costco
because it happens to me every time I go to Costco.
You get Raynaud's?
Yeah, I have it, I've had it, but it's something
about the shopping carts and the heights and the
coolness of, and maybe just the stress of people with
(41:36):
vestibular injuries going into Costco, but it's a thing.
Yeah.
And there's a whole protocol after talking to
Christy Hughes and that's part of her lecture.
It's why she's in the symposium instead of the advanced is.
the changes that they know about that happen
(41:58):
on the inside of the blood vessels after COVID.
So COVID, the virus, It goes into the ACE2
receptors in the blood supply, and when they come
boiling out, they just trash the endothelium.
She's got a really good illustration of what the
endothelium looks like when it's been trashed.
And then,
(42:18):
what it's like to rebuild it.
The protocol we wrote for vascular
health is torn and broken.
By inflammation, reducing inflammation,
increase secretions because the endothelium
secretes the lining that makes it Smooth
(42:40):
right and
vitality and you run all those for two to
four minutes a piece and it finally got
my heart rate variability backup running.
Wow.
Yeah, that's like my heart rate variability since we
got back from Poland and Rome has been in the teens.
(43:04):
And it used to be in the thirties and forties, and
it's come on, it's not just concussion in Vegas.
What is what happened?
And I didn't get COVID.
I didn't get sick.
But when I did two weeks ago, when I added vascular health.
It popped back up into the, at
(43:25):
least the high 20s, which was nice.
Good.
What was I going to ask about
Jillian Bennett.
Not a question, but wish everybody a happy holidays.
Happy holidays, everybody.
Thank you to Dr.
Carolyn Kim for all their knowledge
and guidance this past year.
With my introduction to FSM, it has changed
my life with an Ehlers Danlos diagnosis
(43:48):
and my husband's 20 years of chronic pain.
Thank you.
Oh, the other thing was I just had, we had a note
here from Janet and who, when we were talking
about my daughter's cellulitis and bursitis she had
written just a thought adrenals get stressed occurs
when working night shift at 2am with cortisol.
Would adrenal support have been helpful?
(44:10):
Cortisol reduces inflammation.
I guess the question is, what is the
effect of cortisol on the immune system?
I don't know.
Can't hurt.
Might help.
And.
Yeah.
I don't know.
(44:30):
If you look at the patient, how old is your daughter?
She'll
be 15.
So she's 14, 15.
Playing hockey.
Oh.
Me and my shivering.
Yeah, Kim and shivering.
Oh,
that's a thought.
Maybe.
Yeah, there's that.
And, oh, elevated cortisol interferes with the conversion
(44:55):
of the storage form T4 to the active form of T3.
So when your stress levels go up, as they might when you
think your daughter is two steps away from sepsis and
going to visit her grandmother that would make you chilled.
(45:17):
Your thyroid went down.
You weren't getting any exercise
to raise your activity level.
I used to get really cold every 2 a.
m.
when working the night shift and get chills and
couldn't get warm and with stress cases at night.
Yeah.
Elevated cortisol.
She's from a ER
doc, everybody, so she understands.
(45:39):
It was so wonderful to have Jenna Dang here in October.
That was great.
Yes.
She came to the two day and then she
went to your three day class, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's great.
Excellent.
Yeah.
It was such a small class, but
those small classes are magical.
There's just so much collaboration and storytelling.
So it almost turns into a masterclass of I'm like,
(46:02):
okay guys, I have to get through these slides, but
yes, we're
going to talk
about this stuff.
It makes the practicum so wonderful
because you have extra time.
You have fewer tables to get to.
And the people really do a deep dive into literally
into the patient's abdomen or shoulder or elbow or hip.
(46:25):
I think we have one more question.
Non cancerous cysts on the tail of the pancreas may or may
not have been the result of trauma was drained has refilled
about seven centimeters in diameter Basics, of course,
could you talk about cyst frequencies and any other ideas?
(46:49):
Okay, when I got to the cyst frequencies for
cystic condition, I had to tell this class
I haven't found anything they're good for.
I've used them on breast cysts, I've used
them on ovarian cysts, they don't do anything.
They don't change anything in real time.
(47:10):
So maybe they change the tendency to create cis.
That's a possibility.
That's a thing.
But they don't do anything.
Cis are the result.
The breast cis have been the most
impressive and ovarian cysts.
So you run 40 in the ovary, and you turn a cyst from
(47:30):
the size of an orange, in a little water balloon,
to, the size of an ovary, about a centimeter.
And that's just running 40.
Right breast cyst, seven centimeters.
Ultrasound, they measured it.
(47:53):
They let me go into the treatment room,
treat the patient, and from palpation.
The thing that made the cyst shrink the most
were the three frequencies for toxicity,
but mostly the frequency for inflammation.
And the ultrasound that was done 30 minutes
(48:13):
after the first ultrasound showed a 25%.
shrinkage in the cyst.
Treat the tail of the pancreas for inflammation.
Cancer is inflammatory.
I would increase the patient's intake of methylfolate and
(48:36):
assuming they can demethylate B12, methyl B12, because
Methyl groups, when the DNA breaks, methyl groups stick
on the end of the DNA and prevent it from turning into
abnormal DNA that you find in a cancerous situation.
(48:59):
Right.
So seven centimeters is huge.
The tail of pancreas is that big.
So that cyst tripled the size of the tail of pancreas.
Or maybe double it.
They drank it and it refilled.
That's huge.
Basics, of course, in the pancreas, not the islets.
(49:20):
Check the pancreatic enzymes.
Are they making amylase?
Are they making lipase?
What's their insulin levels?
So what effect is this cyst having
on the function of the pancreas?
Is the rest of the pancreas taking over the job?
I
have all these curiosities.
(49:41):
But
those questions are what prompts the hypotheses, and
it You have to start asking questions and the, my
favorite, most simplistic one is how did it get there?
How are we here?
Why are we here?
When did we get here?
(50:02):
May or may not have been the result of trauma.
What trauma?
The pancreas is buried.
It's behind the stomach.
It's next to the liver.
How do you traumatize, especially the tail of the pancreas?
I'm pretty sure it's behind the stomach.
(50:24):
How do you traumatize the pancreas?
Did the patient have a gastric bypass surgery?
A rubber band put on her stomach and
they oopsed and hit the pancreas?
Trauma.
We have a frequency for that.
True.
I would treat.
The alarm.
(50:45):
Four o'clock alarm.
It's the saddest alarm of the week.
Eight
millimeters?
What are you reading?
Maria?
Oh.
Maria's question.
What do you suggest for nodules?
That have appeared on the index finger of
the right hand, tender to touch when they're
pushed on and they're eight millimeters.
(51:06):
That's almost a centimeter.
That's a lump that passed nodule
about three millimeters ago.
It's overuse.
It's called starts with a B.
What is that called?
The little bumps on the end of the fingers.
Janet, what are those called?
(51:27):
Come on!
Somebody help me out here.
Well, Carol's waiting for the, or
Janet was just thinking, she said.
So when you guys can Google it very fast while
I make so everybody's been subscribing who
gets the FSM and Precision Distributing News.
Okay.
You have a couple weeks to get your devices
because they have the big end of the year sale.
So now is the time to give Christmas presents
(51:50):
or
your Christmas list.
Or make your accountant very happy by buying the
stuff at the end of the year that you can work off.
I actually got a letter from my accountant saying
go buy stuff that is detectable and it's So it's
his fault I bought a new desktop computer yesterday.
Heberden's Nodules.
(52:10):
Nodes.
Thank you.
What are they?
One.
I knew it had a B in it.
Oh.
And it's a, it's a combination between periosteum
and the tendon at, and the joint capsule.
And it gets calc, inflamed, calcified,
the synovial fluid gets hard.
(52:33):
So you treat the synovium for hardening, and
the capsid for hardening, and hope for the best.
It's 4 o'clock.
It's 4 o 4.
There you go.
Thank you, Leif.
We will.
Have a happy holiday.
And then we're back next week.
We're back next week.
It's not Christmas even, this is
(52:55):
the
18th, so we'll have one more this year.
Yes.
We have one more
week.
Okay.
See you next week.
Thanks for letting me share my story, my debriefment.
Oh, it was a good learning experience for
the daughter, you, and everybody listening.
And a source of gratitude for all the extra knowledge
That you get to hold on to that doesn't just go in.
(53:16):
Yeah.
Yeah.
Cellulitis and out the other
it's, Oh no, this is a real thing.
Here we go.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's passing that knowledge along from within
our group to the huge group that has become FSM.
That is just my favorite part.
Yay.
And talking with you.
Okay.
(53:37):
Yes.
Thank you.
Me too.
All right.
Okay.
Yes.
Thank you.
And we'll see you next week.
See you next week.
Bye.
Bye.
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(53:59):
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(54:19):
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