Case Study #9: Doctor, I just lost some of my eyesight!
Case Study #9: Doctor, I just lost some of my eyesight!"
Posted on 2012-01-09 13:11:22
Case Study #9: "Doctor, I just lost some of my eyesight! Can You help me? "
Kim is a 54 year old woman is tip-top shape who called me in a panic this past weekend. She was already a patient so we had a professional relationship established. Kim told me on the phone that she was sitting at home watching a movie when she noticed a dark spot in the middle of her vision field. She thought she might be having a stroke. I went to see the patient on a Sunday night. I took her blood pressure, performed reflexes, postural appreciation, light touch and basic range of motion of her neck and low back. All was normal. I next performed a simple set of Cranial Nerve checks with emphasis on Cranial I, II, III, IV, VI. All of these inventories were normal as well.
What Kim was describing was a "scotoma." A scotoma is a darkend area in your field of vision. It often looks like a black spot. See Picture:
Scotomas are defined as temporary (sometimes permanent) blind spots in a person's field of vision. The usual culprits for this are optic lesions such as optis neuritis, macular degeneration, glaucoma, clorioretinitis. Migraine headaches can also cause this as well as diabetes. Stroke maybe but very rarely.
In lieu of an opthalmological exam which I can't do, I opted to chiropractically adjust Kim's mid back. We are all familiar with the so-called "autonomic" nervous system. That's the system of nerves that controls blood flow, adrenaline, heart rate, respiratory rate and adjusts your body according to your needs. It is "sympathetic" to your needs at any given moment. We should also be familiar with some of the miraculous cures that have been affected by chiropractic adjustments to the spine that, in effect, re-calibrate the sympathetic nervous system. The legend of Harvey Lillard is a good example: This is how chiropractic got its modern name of expression when bonesetter DD Palmer adjusted Harvey's neck when Mr. Lillard claimed he had gone deaf years before when he heard a crack in his neck. The adjustment restored Harvey's hearing. In 1990, in the Journal of Opthamology, a man who had gone blind after a fall had his vision restored after chiropractic adjustments to his neck. This after all conventional treatment failed.
The common problem in all these scenarios including Kim is this; blood flow was interupted to the various organs in question. The organs themselves were normal. Chiropractic adjustments that affected the sympathetic nervous system restored normal blood flow and special senses were restored. It is an old story. Kim's scotoma was irradicated instantaneously with one adjustment to the mid back. Case Closed.
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