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My understanding regarding toxins within the body...is basically that that is the job of fat cells--holding "toxins" (excess fat, pollution, cleaning chemical vapors that we inhale, etc) to prevent them (toxins) from affecting our more vital organs. I am curious to know if anyone has nutritional knowledge to confirm/disprove this.
With regard to the idea that massage flushes toxins out of the muscles, I am including an excerpt from an excellent article on the subject.
Interesting! What is the citation for the source? I'd love to read the rest of the article.
lee kalpin said:With regard to the idea that massage flushes toxins out of the muscles, I am including an excerpt from an excellent article on the subject.
Rajam K Roose said:For example, I would take Paul Ingraham's site with a grain of salt ... He goes on to encourage the therapist to apply firm pressure directly in the soft region right in the middle of the occipital triangle ... This is taught to be an endangerment site ...
Fair point, but I don’t think it’s a major issue. Numerous listings of endangerment sites do not include this location. Also, concern about applying pressure to nerves and arteries is generally exaggerated. For instance, many listings of endangerment sites include the entire anterior cervical triangle, but obviously there’s plenty of good therapeutic work that can be done in this region. Endangerment sites are not necessarily off-limits, just areas where there’s a red flag.
That said, your point should be noted in the article. I’ll make an appropriate adjustment to the language. Thanks for pointing it out.
I hope that you won’t take my entire site “with a grain of salt” just because you disagreed with one thing that you found in an article I wrote about ten years ago. No writer can stand by everything they have ever written. Of course, you can certainly take SaveYourself.ca with a grain of salt in the sense that it’s always good to think critically! But I would encourage you to evaluate claims and statements individually and give SaveYourself.ca plenty of chances to be useful to you. It’s a really big site. ;-)
My computer skills are not the best for this. I will attempt to send you the link and hope I have it right.
http:/www.massagetoday.com/mpacms/mt/article.php?id=10608
I hope it works. Obviously from a magazine titled Massage Today.and the writer is Eric Grant Phd
/blockquote>
Got the article, Lee, but I still have a lot of questions. Mainly, regarding a snippet from the section you quote earlier:
If the tissue is to accumulate wastes in a static manner, i.e. not as an instantaneous balance between production and removal, the tissue must be isolated. If we assume that the tissue is isolated from blood circulation, then necrosis (cellular death) is the rapid consequence.
If the above statement is true, how do ischemia and trigger points fit into things? I'm confused.
Also, [Massage] will also reduce the muscular pressure on surrounding tissues, effectively improving circulation and recovery from use. This, however, is not massage moving out toxins, but massage facilitating a better homeostasis.
I asked a question earlier about, I think, this very thing. I wonder if the distinction is thus:
- That there is a common misconception that the pressure applied to muscle tissue squeezes out the wastes/toxins, much like squeezing water out of a dirty sponge.
. . . when in reality, it's more like massage helps release the fist clenched around said dirty sponge, allowing water from the faucet (ie, blood/increase circulation) to rinse away the accumulated gunk.
Does this sound like a reasonable analogy to anyone? Or am I wildly off base?
lee kalpin said:My computer skills are not the best for this. I will attempt to send you the link and hope I have it right.
http:/www.massagetoday.com/mpacms/mt/article.php?id=10608
I hope it works. Obviously from a magazine titled Massage Today.and the writer is Eric Grant Phd
/blockquote>
Your questions are good, and I feel that I am not the best person to answer. I hope that one of the members with more science knowledge will step in.
Dr.George Roth D.C claims excellent results in the treatment of scoliosis through his Matrix Repatterning method.
http://www.matrixrepatterningcenter.com/patients/Pa_whoarewe.htm
They definitely have made claims of straightening curvature. In fact, I believe that is on the website somewhere (in one of the videos, testimonials or somewhere) - has been sometime since I reviewed the material though
lee kalpin said:I have heard of this technique, and as a matter of fact I know some of the practitioners featured on the website.
As with any technique, I would like to see a report of a research study done by an expert (or experts) who are uninvolved in the practice.
When they say there are excellent results I wonder if they are claiming that they have reduced the curvature? Or have they relieved pain? Not sure what the claim is.
Lee
Rick Britton said:Dr.George Roth D.C claims excellent results in the treatment of scoliosis through his Matrix Repatterning method.
http://www.matrixrepatterningcenter.com/patients/Pa_whoarewe.htm
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