Neural
Therapy was originally developed in Germany by the Huneke
brothers. It involves the injection of Procaine (also known as Novocain), a
common local anesthetic, into various but very specific areas. Neural Therapy
is based on the theory that trauma can produce long-standing disturbances in
the electrochemical function of tissues. Among the types of tissues affected by
trauma include scars, nerves or a cluster of nerves called ganglions. A
correctly administered Neural Therapy injection can often instantly and
lastingly resolve chronic longstanding illness and chronic pain.
Although
an estimated 35% of all West German physicians use Neural Therapy to some
extent and in the rest of the Western World it has become one of the most
widely used modalities in the treatment of chronic pain, most physicians in the
United States
are unfamiliar with Neural Therapy. Here in the United States, "trigger point
injections" are commonly used for pain based on the work of Janet Travell, M.D. It is not widely known but Dr. Travell learned about trigger points while studying in
Germany and then returned home to write the reference book widely used in the
United States on Trigger Point injections. However, Trigger Point injections
are just one type of Neural Therapy. Neural Therapy is also often very
effective for other medical illnesses such as allergies, chronic bowel
problems, kidney disease, prostate and female problems, infertility, tinnitus
(ringing in the ears), and many other conditions.
How
did Neural Therapy start?
The
basis for Neural Therapy started with the use of cocaine as a local anesthetic
in the late 1800's by the great scientists, Pavlov and Sigmund Freud. In 1906,
the German surgeon, Spiess, discovered that wounds
and inflammatory processes subsided more quickly and with fewer complications
after injection with the newly discovered Novocain (procaine), which did not
possess the addicting qualities of cocaine.
The
famous French surgeon, Leriche, performed the first
nerve block into the stellate ganglion in 1925 for
the treatment of chronic intractable arm pain. He described the injection of
Novocain as the surgeon's "bloodless knife." Ganglion blocks are now
commonly used for the treatment of neck, shoulder, arm, leg, and low back pain.
In addition, Procaine can be used directly in the nerves of the autonomic
nervous system, peripheral nerves, scars, glands, acupuncture points, trigger
points, and other tissues. Even intravenous Lidocaine has treated chronic
somatic pain, including cancer pain.
Modern
Neural Therapy owes its discovery to an accident in 1925, observed and
interpreted by two physicians, Ferdinand and Walter Huneke.
They had for years attempted in vain to help their sister, who often suffered
severe migraine attacks. During one particularly violent attack, Ferdinand
injected his sister intravenously with what he thought was a remedy for
rheumatism. While he was still administering the injection, the blinding
migraine headache simply vanished, together with the flashing sensation in
front of her eyes, dizziness, nausea and depression. Her headaches never
recurred! After witnessing this miraculous recovery, Ferdinand and Walter
realized their sister's intravenous injection actually contained Procaine.
After much further experimentation, it became clear that it was Procaine alone
that had produced the startling cure, and therefore Procaine could also be used
as a treatment remedy, as well as a local anesthetic.
How
does Neural Therapy work at a site of disturbance?
A
German neurophysiologist, Albert Fleckenstein, demonstrated that the cells in
scar tissue have a different membrane potential from normal body cells,
functioning much like a 1.5 volt battery implanted into the body. Whenever a cell has lost its normal membrane potential, ion pumps
in the cell wall stop working. This means that abnormal minerals and
toxic substances accumulate inside the cell. As a result, the cell loses the
ability to heal itself and resume normal functioning. Procaine acts on the cell
wall to allow the ion pumps to resume normal action and restore the membrane
potential. This is how Procaine and other agents used in Neural Therapy correct
the bioelectric disturbance at a specific site or nerve ganglion. By
re-establishing the normal electrical condition of cells and nerves, the
disturbed functions are also restored to normality, and the patient returns to
health as far as this is anatomically still possible. The amazing part of
Neural Therapy is that the site being treated can be very far away for the
tissue in the body that is not functioning properly. For example, a scar on the
chin can affect the low back. This is possible because of the vast network of
nerves called the Autonomic Nervous System.
What
is the Autonomic Nervous System?
The
nerves of your autonomic system provide a vast network of electrical circuits,
having a total length of twelve times the circumference of the earth, and
connecting every one of your 40 trillion cells to form a living whole human
organism. This autonomic (or neurovegetative) system
controls the vital processes everywhere in your body. It regulates your
breathing, circulation, body temperature, digestion, metabolism, hormone
formation and distribution. It causes your heart to beat and your lungs to
breathe automatically, even when you are asleep. It does in fact control all of
the numerous automatic processes without which you could not live. In other
words virtually every cell in your body is connected not only to each other
through the autonomic nervous system but is also in large part controlled by
your autonomic nervous system.
As
Fleckenstein showed, scar tissue can create an abnormal electric signal. In
turn this signal is transmitted throughout the rest of your body via the
autonomic nervous system. Procaine delivered by direct injection to scars or
through other nerves that travel into deeper scars through tiny tubules in the
cellular matrix to these areas of bioelectrical disturbance for treatment. As a
result, Procaine is capable of eliminating autonomic regulatory dysfunctions.
Since the autonomic nervous system is the master controller of the body, Neural
Therapy can have a profound impact on your condition and your ability to heal.
In
1940, Ferdinand Huneke observed the first
"lightning reaction" or the "Huneke
phenomenon," discovering that a scar can produce an "interference
field." A patient presented to him with a severely painful frozen right
shoulder that had been refractory to all kinds of therapies. Huneke injected the shoulder joint directly with Procaine
without obtaining any pain relief. However, within several days of the shoulder
injection, the patient developed severe itching in a scar in her left lower leg
where she had surgery years prior and just before developing the painful
shoulder. When she returned, Huneke injected Procaine
into the itchy scar in her left leg. Almost immediately she obtained full and
painless range of motion in her right shoulder joint. The shoulder problem
never recurred. The left leg scar injection had apparently "cured"
her shoulder problem. This was the first observation of what Neural Therapy is
capable.
What
causes interference fields?
- Infections.
- Emotional trauma.
- Physical Trauma from any type of
surgery, accidents, deep cuts, biopsies, childbirth, dental procedures,
vaccinations, burns, tattoos, etc.
You
then may wonder how a scar or infection becomes activated to become an
interference field. General stress from illness, malnutrition, emotional
stress, food allergies, pregnancy, etc. seems to convert an inactive
interference field to one that creates a disturbance.
Why
does Neural Therapy work?
I
used to believe that if you get all the nutrients you need, avoid everything
that makes you worse (allergens, alcohol, etc.), and detoxify or get rid of
anything that is preventing you from getting well (mercury, yeast, abusive
relationships), your body will heal itself. These were the three ingredients of
attaining health. However, for some individuals even when everything has been
done in these three areas, something seems to be interfering with getting well.
It turns out to be interference fields from scars, trauma, etc. that are
disturbing the instructions of the autonomic nervous system to heal the body. Emotional imprints are also considerations,
but for the purposes of our discussion, we’ll focus on physical interference fields.
To
understand this more fully, one has to understand that the autonomic nervous
system is made up of two divisions. One division is the sympathetic nervous
system that is activated by stress. It speeds up your heart rate, makes you
burn sugar more rapidly, tenses your muscles, and in general increases your
ability to "fight or flight." The other division of the autonomic
nervous system is the parasympathetic nervous system. Its job is to promote
healing, digestion, repair etc. It slows your heart rate down, increases mucus
and digestion, etc.
A
key feature of the sympathetic nervous system is that it links all of the cells
of the body together, regulates the contraction and expansion of blood vessels,
regulates the activity of the connective tissue necessary for regenerating body
systems, and it regulates the voltage (membrane potential) across the cell wall
in every cell in the body. While either the parasympathetic or sympathetic nervous
system could be overly dominant and lead to symptoms, most people are stuck in
an overly reactive sympathetic state. In other words, the healing mechanism is
impaired or "interfered with."
Will
Neural Therapy replace all other therapies?
I
used to think that the biochemistry and hormones of the body directed the all
of the metabolic actions in the body. What I now realize is that in fact the
reverse, the autonomic nervous system is the master controller of biochemistry.
Our personalized nutritional systems have allowed healing only to the point at
which the nervous system will allow. Thus, when your interference fields have
been addressed here with Neural Therapy, the results seem to be longer lasting
and more complete compared to other practitioners using Neural Therapy. I
suspect it is because of the attention we give in laying your nutritional
groundwork. It is what has distinguished our practice from others. My current
challenge is to find out the most effective nutritional ways to balance your nervous
system so that you are optimized for staying healthy.
Neural
Therapy is just another modality available to you. Combining it with a
personalized nutritional/metabolic/detoxification program is one of the most
powerful healing tools available.
How
many Neural Therapy treatments are typically necessary?
Sometimes
one treatment will resolve the problem. More often, only a partial improvement
follows each treatment. Three to six treatments are the average number to
achieve lasting resolution of a chronic condition. What Neural Therapy does for
many of my patients is to open the door to allow the other healing modalities
to finish the job. Less often do I see the dramatic miraculous response that
the Huneke Brothers described.
Rather it is a gradual resolution of the dysfunction and a return to optimal
health.
When
is Neural Therapy Used in this Medical Practice?
Patients
who can identify an event that occurred just before they became sick. The patient will often say they have
not been the same since… Also useful in patients who have
failed to respond to commonly successful treatment regimes. When there
is no "appropriate" trauma to explain the current symptoms to a
specific joint or body location. When there is discrepancy between objective
and subjective findings. When "bizarre" or unusual
symptoms persist. When there is pain on one side of the body only (e.g.,
single arm and/or leg pain). To aid in the removal of heavy
metals from the body. Neural Therapy has been reported to correct other
medical conditions besides pain - metabolic problems like diabetes or iron
overload, chronic infections, nerve injuries, emotional traumas, etc.
Why
is Neural Therapy is not more widely known in the United States?
In
the United States,
"trigger-point injections" and "nerve blocks" are used all
the time. The term Neural Therapy merely encompasses a broader (and much more
powerful) technique. It is not really "alternative."
Neural
Therapy does not lend itself to the conventional "double-blind
study", because each patient with pain needs to be treated in a different
way. Neural Therapy also requires a thorough history of every traumatic event.
The most important aspect is when and if the trauma occurred before the development
of symptoms.
The
American Academy
of Neural Therapy (www.neuraltherapy.com)
may be able to refer you to a qualified practitioner for those of who are not
in Southern California.
Are
there any alternatives to giving injections?
Neural
Therapy can also be accomplished using an ElectroBloc
or special lasers. We do not use the laser yet in this office because the
devices used have not been FDA-approved. The ElectroBloc
is powerful "Tens" like unit for treating deeper structures (example
- your pelvis and neck) where a needle might be more dangerous or provoke
anxiety. Our office, like other doctors using Neural Therapy, has seen very
good results using the ElectroBloc. In some
situations it works better than the injections, but in other situations it is
not as beneficial as injections.
Summary.
Because
of the inner connectedness of every cell through the sympathetic nervous
system, now matter how seemingly distant from each other, it is truthful to say
that any illness indicates that the living organism as a whole has lost its
ability to regulate itself in a completely healthful way. An organ (heart,
gallbladder, eye, joint etc.) never becomes diseased in isolation, but always
as a symptom of the whole individual. My task is to provide your body
nourishment and, if necessary to remove any interferences,
so it can regulate itself and heal itself to your highest function.