SYMPOSIUM

Workshop title
Neural Therapy for Chronic Respiratory Disease after Prolonged Respiratory Infections

Scheduled
Day 2, 9:00 – 10:30

Workshop summary

Pain is not the only condition that tends to become chronic: Any biological system runs the risk of getting stuck in uneconomic dysfunctions caused by long compensatory adaptations – even after the cause has disappeared.

We see an increasing number of patients struggling with labored breathing, unproductive coughing and reduced physical performance long after respiratory infections such as COVID, pertussis, RSV, etc. have been overcome. In addition, patients tend to suffer from chest discomfort and depression. Pulmonary function tests, blood oxygen and auscultation are within normal limits. How does Neural Therapy help? Palpation reveals affected head zones, muscular trigger points and joint blockages that cause harmful breathing patterns. These are all targeted by the therapy, the application of local anaesthetics. It is also important to look for interference fields that feed into the nervous system, particularly the Phrenic Nerve, the intercostal nerves and the cervical trigeminal system. By infiltrating these interference fields (mostly scars and teeth) we gain access to the autonomic nervous system, the locomotor system and the kinematic chains of the fascial system. Neural therapy is effective in treating muscular Triggerpoints, reestablishing balance of the autonomic nervous system and in restoring harmonious breathing.

Conflict of interest
No

Photo_Speaker_Johanna OSZTOVICS
Johanna OSZTOVICS
Austria