Guest guest Posted September 25, 2008 Report Share Posted September 25, 2008 I would like to offer some suggestions on locations to try for stress imbalances. Starting with issues that may be linked with the fall. Dental - TMJ (remember you need to go to the Information drop down first and Start the exchange, and then you have to get into the Isodes, nosodes and Teeth Tables - all in that same drop down to get to the TMJ button which activates the TMJ drop-down items) TMJ Muscle Sarcode Panel. This is to help with all the muscles involved with the head & neck Short sarcode RX (Facial: Brain (2 of them), Eye Diagnosis: Eye points, Eyestrain, Eye Anatomy & Eye Muscles, especially the lateral rectus muscle - do each point by point) Spinal: Eye (do what comes up) Spinal: Timed Therapies: Eyes & occipital (do wholistic organ health restorer checking each option for time) Test matrix check occipital, eye and liver (liver and eye works together) Specifically do 2589 for the Rectus muscle, 5954 for Strabisum, and 5630 for Diplopia all of those are relevant to this condition. Brain Wave Therapy in EEG, ECG Disease Dictionary: Diplopia I do not suspect you will get through all these in one session. Keep us posted on her condition. Yours in Health, Kathy www.4yourhealthshop.com kathyqx@... www.vital-connection.com Ecotropia Wondering if anyone has any references/thoughts /experiences with this (see below). Will be running SCIO session on Sunday, but wanted to see if anyone had any advice on things to look for, etc.... Kylie was diagnosed with esotropia at the age of three. It started with a bump to the head (fell & hit her head on a chair @ hairline above right eye), and she woke up the next day with one eye crossing inward. The MRI came out fine, but had noted some sinusitis. Her eyes started with intermittent crossing and then became consistent crossing. Her diagnosis was acquired esotropia and basic esotropia. We had many opinions and all said that she is not farsighted and patching and glasses would not help, Only surgery. We had surgery one month ago and after the third week she started intermittent crossing...every other day she is crossed. The pediatric ophthalmologist says that she is having weak fusion. Which, I believe, is the brain having a hard time aligning the eyes. If her eyes stay intermittent, the doctor had said there is not much we can do. Surgery can be done if it turns to constant crossing.What is the cause of her eyes crossing? There was no given cause. Not hereditary, not due to head trauma or eye disease. She is a rare case because she is not farsighted.One thing I know is that we need a new doctor. I also plan on seeing if an ENT can do a scope of her sinuses and adenoids (which has to do with her nasal speech) and maybe a neurologist. Or any thoughts you might have.Thanks,Jody Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 25, 2008 Report Share Posted September 25, 2008 Has she had SCIO treatment? Homeopathy will also work. Are you the practitioner or parent or friend of the family? Please stop or ask the parents or guardians of this child just to take a step aside and look at the situation with a bit of objectivity. She has never been well since the fall and trauma to the head (correct?)...... Now on tiop od the original head trauma an op was carried out more tissue trauma to the area (correct?).... So if you have any power of the decition making please ask the parents to take this child to a holistic practitioner before it is to late and ireversible damage is done. SOLUTIONS: Homeopathic remedy: Arnica 200 Single dose wait 1 week if problem persists Natrum Sulph 200 single dose. I strogly recommend seeing a homeopath and if they work with the SCIO even better.Best Regards Branco QuantuMedical Ltd. Branco LCPHLondon MARH UK FBIH ILQBT Tel.: +49 30 3010 1163 Mobile: +49 176 2079 6804 http://www.quantumedical.de http://www.sciosan.com This e-mail is confidential and may contain privileged information. If you are not the addressee it may be unlawful for you to read, copy, distribute, disclose or otherwise use the information in this e-mail. If you are not the intended recipient please notify us immediately. qxci-scio-epfx-english From: joro357@...Date: Wed, 24 Sep 2008 22:41:00 +0000Subject: Ecotropia Wondering if anyone has any references/thoughts/experiences with this (see below). Will be running SCIO session on Sunday, but wanted to see if anyone had any advice on things to look for, etc.... Kylie was diagnosed with esotropia at the age of three. It started with a bump to the head (fell & hit her head on a chair @ hairline above right eye), and she woke up the next day with one eye crossing inward. The MRI came out fine, but had noted some sinusitis. Her eyes started with intermittent crossing and then became consistent crossing. Her diagnosis was acquired esotropia and basic esotropia. We had many opinions and all said that she is not farsighted and patching and glasses would not help, Only surgery. We had surgery one month ago and after the third week she started intermittent crossing...every other day she is crossed. The pediatric ophthalmologist says that she is having weak fusion. Which, I believe, is the brain having a hard time aligning the eyes. If her eyes stay intermittent, the doctor had said there is not much we can do. Surgery can be done if it turns to constant crossing.What is the cause of her eyes crossing? There was no given cause. Not hereditary, not due to head trauma or eye disease. She is a rare case because she is not farsighted.One thing I know is that we need a new doctor. I also plan on seeing if an ENT can do a scope of her sinuses and adenoids (which has to do with her nasal speech) and maybe a neurologist. Or any thoughts you might have.Thanks,Jody Win £3000 to spend on whatever you want at Uni! Click here to WIN! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 27, 2008 Report Share Posted September 27, 2008 Hi Jody I took a weekend class a few years ago about "Relearning to See" and I have a book by Quackenbush, by the same name. Right after I finished the class my granddaughter had this same problem of her eyes crossing. In his book he says it is the muscles that need strenghtening by doing certain exercises, such as looking to the left and then to the right and in my book there was a paddle that my daughter in law used to draw my granddaughters eyes to the left and right and upward and downward, etc. It worked, her lazy muscles strengthened and she no longer had the problem. I checked on Amazon and that book is still available and in fact has a lot of good write ups. Hope this helps. Have a wonderful day lee Sacramento Ecotropia Wondering if anyone has any references/thoughts /experiences with this (see below). Will be running SCIO session on Sunday, but wanted to see if anyone had any advice on things to look for, etc.... Kylie was diagnosed with esotropia at the age of three. It started with a bump to the head (fell & hit her head on a chair @ hairline above right eye), and she woke up the next day with one eye crossing inward. The MRI came out fine, but had noted some sinusitis. Her eyes started with intermittent crossing and then became consistent crossing. Her diagnosis was acquired esotropia and basic esotropia. We had many opinions and all said that she is not farsighted and patching and glasses would not help, Only surgery. We had surgery one month ago and after the third week she started intermittent crossing...every other day she is crossed. The pediatric ophthalmologist says that she is having weak fusion. Which, I believe, is the brain having a hard time aligning the eyes. If her eyes stay intermittent, the doctor had said there is not much we can do. Surgery can be done if it turns to constant crossing.What is the cause of her eyes crossing? There was no given cause. Not hereditary, not due to head trauma or eye disease. She is a rare case because she is not farsighted.One thing I know is that we need a new doctor. I also plan on seeing if an ENT can do a scope of her sinuses and adenoids (which has to do with her nasal speech) and maybe a neurologist. Or any thoughts you might have.Thanks,Jody Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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