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The post Satya Sardonicus, DC, CACCP discusses her course Management of Common Conditions 270 appeared first on Chiro Credit Blog.
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Could your adjustments be making things worse for some patients?
It’s a bold question – but when it comes to Cerebellar Tonsillar Ectopia (CTE), most chiropractors don’t realize how common this condition is… or how easily it gets missed.
1 in 4 patients with neck pain and a history of whiplash may have CTE.
Traditional adjustments can trigger flares if the nervous system isn’t ready for change.
Chiropractors are uniquely positioned to help – but only with the right tools.
In Part 2 of Dr. Satya’s continuing education series, she shares:
How to use specialized palpation and muscle testing to avoid nervous system overload.
How to modify care to reduce adverse mechanical tension and restore change receptivity.
How to support your patients for lasting, sustainable results.
Because when CTE is missed, patients suffer needlessly. And when it’s recognized, your care can change their life.
This course is live now on ChiroCredit.com – let’s elevate the standard of care together.
Hour 1
- Describe the relevance of clinical history as it relates to chronic stress and trauma.
- Recognize signs and symptoms of sympatheticotonia.
- Recognize signs and symptoms of possible CTE.
- Determine appropriate individualized examination procedures based on history answers.
Hour 2
- Refer for diagnosis and advanced testing for CTE.
- Describe layered components of restrictions including updated osseous, muscular, and fascial relational anatomy.
- Describe how to palpate muscle tension versus fascial adhesion versus fascial tension lines.
- Differentiate between osseous restriction, muscular tension, and fascial restriction as they relate to spinal motion restriction.
- Use palpatory findings to select technique application for adjustments that last longer by addressing mechanical root cause and encourage parasympathetic dominance at rest.
Hour 3
- Describe the difference between static misalignments and dynamic spinal restrictions (joints incapable of full range of motion).
- Differentiate with palpation both static and dynamic spinal restrictions.
- Describe neurological information gathered from palpation
- Palpate the patient with chronic pain, trauma history, and/or sympatheticotonia without triggering sympathetic bracing.
Hour 4
- Describe the Oxford Grading Scale for manual muscle testing.
- Describe interpretation of manual muscle testing findings, including differentials for clinical significance of findings other than normal.
- Demonstrate manual muscle testing of major postural muscles.
- Apply manual muscle testing as pre- and post-clinical intervention measures during adjustment visits and to track change during review examination.
The post Satya Sardonicus, DC, CACCP discusses her course Management of Common Conditions 270 appeared first on Chiro Credit Blog.
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