CASE PRESENTATION
History
A
nine-year-old Caucasian boy presented on December 27, 2006 for evaluation. His
mother stated that his primary condition was asthma. Over the years all four of
her sisters had brought their children for treatment of various chronic
illnesses, but she was still reluctant and very skeptical that this therapy would
work for her son because of his advanced condition. He had developed
respiratory symptoms at two months of age, had been seen by many specialists,
and had been on multiple medications since that time.
The pregnancy
was uneventful until the thirty-ninth week when the mother had edema,
headaches, and high blood pressure. Because the fetus was stressed, delivery
was induced. After more than six hours of difficult labor, he was delivered
with the assistance of a vacuum suction tube. His mother reported that as a
result, he had a cone-shaped head for several weeks. He was also treated for
jaundice in the first week of his life.
When he was
two months old, he developed a recurrent cough. He was started on albuterol and
then at six years of age switched to levalbuterol hydrochloride. At various
times he has also been treated with cromolyn, fluticasone proprionate and
salmeterol, and montelukast, as well as
with a short course of prednisolone for exacerbations. His last course of oral
steroids was in March 2006. He has also taken cetirizine HCL and budesonide for
seasonal allergies.
The hallmark
of his illness was that a cold would always trigger his asthma. Not including
weekends and holidays, he missed eight days of school in kindergarten, nineteen
days in first grade, and thirteen days in second grade because of asthma. He
had never had any emergency room visits, and had never been hospitalized. His
asthma symptoms would typically worsen with the weather changes in the spring
and fall; the cold winter months were often particularly difficult.
In addition to his asthma, his medical history
was remarkable for some bouts of otitis media, seasonal mold allergies,
occasional headaches, and “croup” about three times a year, lasting three to
four days for each episode. He has had pneumonia five times in his life for
which he has required oral steroid and antibiotic treatment. According to his
mother, he also regularly grinds his teeth at night.
In school he
has had difficulty in reading comprehension. He sees a reading specialist for
one hour a week. He has not had any surgery or dentistry and was up to date on
all of his immunizations. He has had the typical boyhood traumas but has never
been unconscious. One trauma, which stood out in his history, was a bicycle
accident two years prior; he flipped off his bike, and the handle bar pressed
hard under his left ribcage.
Clinical Findings
In the
evaluation procedure I palpated for tissue strain in the diaphragm, lungs,
tracheobronchial tree, throat, neck, cranium, and nasal sinuses. The desired
result of asthma treatment is to manually help the body relieve soft tissue
strain from the nose to the diaphragm over a series of visits to free the
respiratory system.
His brain
cycle was two seconds, one second in expansion and one second in contraction,
indicating an excessive strain in his cranial dural meninges and pressure in
his head. This greatly reduced the brain’s motion and the flow of nourishing
cerebrospinal fluid. His facial bones, sacrum, and dural tube were abnormally
tight with no perceptible movement.
Ideally, the facial bones and sacrum should be
moving in synchronicity with the same long brain cycle. The motion of the
cranial structures and sacrum are dependant on a moving connecting dural tube,
which should slide like a sleeve about ten to fifteen millimeters over the
spinal cord. Life is motion, and the whole cranio-dural tube-sacral system must
be moving freely for the best possible neurophysiology of the child.
The shape of
his head was asymmetrical, a common finding in asthmatic children. The temporal
and parietal bones on the left side were internally or medially rotated and the
temporal and parietal bones on the right side were externally or laterally
rotated. This indicated cranial trauma at some point in his life, probably from
the difficult birth, which created asymmetry, meningeal strain, and a short
brain cycle.
A symmetrical
head may be important for relief of strain around the vagus nerve and its
dorsal nucleus and parasympathetic efferent fibers as it passes through the
cranium between the temporal and occipital bones. As the cranial meninges
release their strain patterns in therapy, the expectation is the return of a
symmetrical head and, at the same time, a longer, more physiologic brain cycle.
Upon palpation
of the respiratory system, I found severe fascial strain in the left lung area.
Some fascial strain was in the tracheobronchial tree and right lung area, but
the left lung area was clearly his most afflicted region. The fascia in his
throat was relatively quiet, but strain was present in the back of his neck and
nasal sinus area.
In most childhood asthma cases, as was the
situation here, fascial strain from the lung area can pull directly through the
neck on the sinuses causing nasal congestion and/or blockage. Because the body
is totally interconnected through the craniosacral fascial system, a child’s
asthma, earaches, and headaches may all have the same traumatic cause. A single
strain pattern in one part of the body (the chest causing the asthma) can have
a major impact on a distant area (the head causing the earaches and headaches).
Outside of the respiratory system, his fascial
web was noncontributory to his asthma. His respiratory muscles were healthy and
did not require muscle therapy. Even though some nights he ground his teeth,
the occlusion and oral structures did not appear to be a contributing factor
for his asthma.
In structurally assessing the boy’s case I
told his mother that he had a severe craniosacral fascial strain that started
in his left lung area and pulled through his neck into his nasal sinuses. I
outlined a series of one-hour treatment visits with the goal of using this
therapy to return his respiratory system to health.
Treatment And Results
The goal of
the first visit was to begin to help the body allow the length of his brain
cycle to increase, and start to free the fascial restriction in the respiratory
system. His cycle opened from two to forty seconds, an excellent response to
therapy. One can hypothesize that with his history of birth trauma, his brain
has been tight with this low cycle his whole life. So after nine years of
continuous pressure, possibly on the vagus nerves, his brain responded very
positively.
He showed significant expected fascial strain
in the left lung area. When I started to work in this region, he could feel the
strain as a thirty-second pressure pain. Once the tissue started to release, he
felt some relief. The whole concept of asthma treatment is to find fascial
strain and help the body release it. The great value of this approach is that
the practitioner can work through the clothing over the chest and still access
and help the body, via the connective tissue web, release the fascia down to
the lung tissue. After the treatment session was over, the boy said that he
could breathe more freely.
At the second
visit his brain cycle was still holding at forty seconds. His mother said that
he was unusually verbally active for a day after the treatment, and that he had
done well overall during the past week. His head was almost symmetrical after
only one visit. I did some minor pelvic and leg strain work. His left lung area
was still straining, but not as much as the first visit. I also worked in the tracheobronchial
tree and right lung area. His brain cycle ended the visit at fifty-five
seconds, a very respectable cycle for just two treatment sessions.
At the third
visit his mother surprised me by sharing that without my knowledge she had
taken him off all of his asthma medication after the first treatment visit to
see if this therapy would work. The medication was available, but he had not
needed it since therapy started two week ago. I ordinarily tell parents not to
expect a significant improvement with their child until after the first four to
five visits. I always feel more comfortable when the doctor is consulted first
about a medication reduction/elimination program. Nevertheless, he did appear
to me to be doing quite well at this point.
I worked in
the left posterior chest area, and the strain was markedly improved. The nasal
sinuses were still straining but were in a more opened position, allowing for
proper drainage. The patient’s mother said that his nose was still stuffy in
the morning. He ended the visit at a seventy second cycle, close to our eighty
second cycle goal. At the fourth visit
his brain cycle held at seventy seconds. The strain in the left lung felt much
relieved and was primarily confined to the lower posterior area in his back.
The strain pattern probably started here at the diaphragm level and traversed
the trunk and neck into his sinuses. He finished this visit at an eighty second
brain cycle. His mother reported at this visit that the cough he normally would
have in the middle of winter was gone. He remained off his asthma medications
at this point.
At the fifth
visit I still found strain in the lower left diaphragm area. He and his mother
then remembered that bicycle accident he had two years ago when he fell off and
the handlebar thrust under his left ribcage, even leaving a scar on the
abdominal skin. When I worked here, I could feel the strain pulling through the
diaphragm into his left lung.
This strain
pattern explained the fact that his mother said his asthma had been worse these
past two years but did not know why. The bicycle accident added one more layer
of strain into the respiratory system that the body had to deal with, making it
even more difficult for him to breathe. Traumas, both remembered and forgotten,
can create fascial strain patterns that can last a lifetime, if left
untreated.20 That area released easily for him, and his brain cycle completed
the visit at eighty seconds.
At the
following visit his mother reported that he had played football with his
brother and father recently in the cold air outside without coughing. This was
a milestone for him. Clinically, he felt very healthy other than some lingering
fascial strain in the lower left back area. He was clear throughout the
remainder of his respiratory system including his nasal sinuses. He finished
the visit at a ninety second cycle and was ready to complete his therapy at the
next visit.
At his seventh
and final visit, thirty days after his first visit, his brain cycle was holding
at ninety seconds. His mother said that he still had not needed any medication,
and his cough had not returned. On one of the coldest days of the winter he was
outside chopping wood and playing football with his dad without showing any
symptoms of asthma. A few days prior to this visit he had started to come down
with a cold, a typical trigger for him, but his asthma did not flare, as it
would have in the past. In checking his whole body, I worked on the lower left
lung area to relieve as much remaining strain as possible.
His brain cycle at this final visit was one
hundred seconds, an excellent reading. His facial bones, sacrum, and dural tube
were all moving freely and in synchronicity with his brain. His head was
symmetrical, and the respiratory system and the rest of his body were quiet of
any fascial strain. He had completed his course of craniosacral fascial
therapy.
Exactly five
weeks after this treatment started, his asthma doctor reexamined him. She found
his lungs to be clear of any wheezing or other obstructions. His peak flow
meter readings were between 275 and 300 Liters/minute, which were in an
acceptable range for him. The physician recommended that at this point there
was no no need for any further asthma medication.
DISCUSSION
The results in
this case were quite typical of my experience with pediatric asthma patients.
This case required seven one-hour visits, well within the typical range of
three to ten visits. In treating asthmatic children like this boy since 1980, I
have found that pediatric asthma is related to dysfunction of the craniosacral
fascial system. In this case as in many others, since the respiratory tissues
involved with asthma are intimately related with other head and neck soft
tissues, a child can have one major upper body craniosacral fascial strain
causing headaches, a nasal sinus condition, chronic earaches, a reading
problem, and asthma – all at the same time.22
Many other chronic childhood illnesses such as
neck aches, gastroesophageal reflux, hyperactivity, strabismus, and colic also
in some cases appear to originate, all or in part, from impairment of the
craniosacral fascial system.22 Craniosacral and fascial traumas are often
overlooked as potential causative factors in chronic childhood diseases.20, 23,
24
In pediatric
asthma, the anatomical focal points for craniosacral fascial therapy can be
divided into three main areas: the lung tissue, the vagus nerve, and the nasal
sinus area. Fascia infuses throughout the tracheobronchial tree and lung tissue
weaving through every structural cell up to the pseudostratified ciliated
columnar epithelial cells.25A fascial sheath, called the endomysium, surrounds
every muscle cell of the body.26 Since the fascial system of the body is one
interconnected web, trauma to the chest or adjacent areas may cause fascial
tightness deeper in the lung tissue around the smooth muscle cells of the
bronchioles. This constriction can contribute to the hypersensitive airways,
which are pathognomonic of asthma. When this fascial strain is relieved over a
series of therapy visits, these lung cells can return to normal physiology, and
the asthma can dissipate naturally.
Many asthma researchers have focused
exclusively on the physiology of the smooth muscle cells surrounding the
bronchioles. The evasive answer to pediatric asthma may be in the physiology of
its surrounding endomysium that may actually control the function of the smooth
muscle cell. Basic research is needed to investigate the potential role the endomysium
plays in pediatric asthma.
The secondary
therapy area is around the vagus nerve as it traverses through the jugular
foramen formed by the temporal and occipital bones and drops into the upper
neck. Craniosacral neuropathology due to head trauma and misalignment can
stimulate the dorsal vagal nucleus and parasympathetic efferent fibers
initiating asthma. Fascial strain, commonly found deep in the upper neck just
inferior to the jugular foramen and deep to the mastoid process of the temporal
bone, may also impair the vagus nerve. In the third treatment area around the
nasal sinus area, facial trauma can stimulate the trigeminal and
glossopharyngeal fibers causing the same parasympathetic action leading to
asthma symptoms.
Craniosacral fascial therapy can also have
therapeutic benefits in some adults with asthma. However, the duration of the
condition is critical. As an example, a middle-aged woman with no previous
respiratory history, who developed asthma after a recent physical trauma, would
be much more likely to respond to therapy than another patient presenting at
this age with asthma that began early in life. In the latter scenario, airway
remodeling due to chronic inflammation has probably occurred over that
forty-year period creating irreversible damage, and the potential for permanent
correction probably no longer exists.
This concept
can help explain the extremely high rate of success with craniosacral fascial
therapy in pediatric asthma; children like this boy have not had asthma long enough
for destructive airway remodeling to occur. It appears that the damage to the
respiratory system generated by fascial strain early in life may be completely
reversible, if treated promptly.
The underlying beauty of this synergistic
approach is that it appears to address the pathological origin of asthma. The
ultimate benefit of clinical care can shift the emphasis of treatment from
managing and attempting to control the disease with medications to correcting
and reestablishing the normal physiology of the child. Clinical research is
urgently needed to establish more definitively the effectiveness of this
therapeutic approach.
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