blossom wrote:ejc, found this when checking out osb.
Oral System Biology is a performance enhancing process thru optimization of oral function.
Consider a head weighs roughly ten or eleven pounds. To compensate for an imbalance in oral function (extractions, crowding, etc.) The head moves forward and the tight muscles holding the forward head position begin to throb. It's possible that balancing oral function can make a big difference in how that neck feels. The imbalance has been removed and the muscles are no longer called on to compensate in such an uncomfortable fashion
maybe dr. amir discussed this already and i missed it.
Blossom
You are on the right track. I answered this question before and am repeating it here.
"Moving on from the hips to the head and neck and trying to answer your question please visualise the following:
I want you to imagine a perfectly shaped head for example that belonging to one of the great athletes like Usain Bolt or Mark Spitzer (a swimming legend). If such a head was balanced on a spike it would have to sit on a certain place on the spike to balance. If we now go and extract just one small tooth out of the patients mouth that head is not going to balance anymore and will need to be repositioned on the spike.
In life it is not a spike but our neck vertebrae which support the head. These vertebrae will have to compensate to balance the head. They compensate by realigning as best as they can. In other words they rotate and distort. Since the damage to the mouth is permanent they have to remain distorted permanently often affecting the nerves that emanate from the spine.
The body is built to gain symmetry all the time. The brain and other reflex mechanisms built into our neurology do not like the vertebral misalignment and contract various muscles to straighten the vertebrae and the head. Since the damage is permanent the messages to the muscles to contract are permanent. Fatigue and pain sets in. Over a long period the discs bulge, spurs grow and a whole host of problems like chronic neck pain and a frozen shoulder etc. develop.
The Atlas vertebrae appears to be misaligned in a majority of patients and its asymmetry appears to also depend/cause the asymmetry of the teeth and jaws. In other words they are interdependent. Correcting the teeth helps correct the Atlas and correcting the Atlas improves the jaw. The required change in the jaw is often much greater and needs long term treatment while the Atlas is corrected in one short visit.
Damage to the jaws are not from a single tooth extraction. It can be from a number of teeth extracted for various reasons which causes far bigger distortions of the neck.
Poor development of the jaws due to dietry effects and genetically missing teeth also eventually cause serious health issues. Please read the article on the Atlas in EJC's other blog
The treatment required is not to the neck which is showing secondary changes but to the mouth to improve matters as Blossom mentions".
The only problem is that just adding the missing weight does not suffice. The damage ends up taking down a lot more with it.