Manual therapy or chiropractic involves the complete manual correction by a specialist doctor of imbalances in bodily functions, particularly in the muscular and skeletal systems.
Manual therapy is successful in treating painful syndromes and diseases in the arm, shoulder, muscle, and skeletal systems, primarily neck, back, and waist pain. In some cases of disc displacement requiring surgical intervention, it can also provide healing as an alternative treatment depending on the severity of the case. Since manual therapy can release nerves compressed by muscles and/or joints, it can even treat migraines, headaches, asthma, indigestion, arthritis, and some emotional disorders, depending on the segments involved. Continue reading...
Neurotherapy is a regulation treatment. It involves alleviating disorders in the vegetative system, which modern medicine cannot explain and which are thought to arise from the patient's own psychology, by administering low-dose anaesthetic injections into the skin. Continue reading...
Prolotherapy, as it is known today, was first practised in the 1930s by Dr George Stuart Hackett. In the early years, it was known as sclerotherapy. Over time, due to the proliferation effect of the method, it was renamed 'prolotherapy'. Continue reading...
The superficial injection method is performed on specific acupuncture points. Acupuncture treats the perivascular sympathetic plexus, sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve fibres. These are specialised structures in the body that can convert the signal at the needle tip into an action potential, and their existence has been proven. Continue reading...
Acupuncture, known to almost everyone, is a method dating back nearly 6,000 years that is used to eliminate diseases or dysfunctions that occur in the body. In this method, needles can be inserted into approximately 400 points on the body, with the number varying depending on the location. Continue reading...