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Heartburn
/ Digestive Health
Your digestive system is one
long tube, which runs from your mouth to your anus with the primary
function of breaking down your food to extract what is needed to make your
body work. Heartburn occurs when some food reverses course and moves from
the stomach up to the esophagus. Chronic stomach pain (dyspepsia) occurs
when the stomach’s powerful acids begin to irritate the stomach lining
either from a breakdown in the protective mucous layer or overproduction
of hydrochloric acid. This can eventually lead to ulcers, which is when
the acids begin to eat the stomach or intestinal wall. Underproduction of
stomach acid can lead to problems of nutrient absorption. For instance
having enough stomach acid is crucial to calcium absorption. All digestive
organs are controlled and regulated by the nervous system, which tells
your stomach to produce just the right amount of acid to maintain health
and balance. It also controls your mouth, tongue, esophagus, throat,
pyloric valve, intestines, pancreas, liver, gall bladder, and other organs
to maintain proper body functions.
Chiropractic and Digestive Health
To put it simply, each digestive organ has two nervous signal inputs. One
says, “slow down” the other says, “speed up”. These are referred to as the
sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems. An imbalance in these
signals can cause malfunctions. For instance a dominance of
parasympathetic signals to the intestine can lead to hyper motility or
diarrhea while a sympathetic dominance can lead to under activity or
constipation. Chiropractors pay special attention to balancing these
systems by removing interference from spinal misalignment subluxation from
both. In a study, gastroenterologists found 72% of patients with abdominal
pain, irritable bowel syndrome, and heartburn had spinal subluxations in
the area that supply nerves to these organs. Another study of 100 patients
with ulcers found that the spine seemed to play a part. The patients were
found to have scoliosis (spinal curvature/subluxation) at the area of the
spine, which supplies sympathetic nerves to the stomach. If the curve was
to the left the ulcer was gastric and if the curve was to the right the
ulcer was duodenal. Those with “S” curves had ulcers of both types. A
pilot study has demonstrated improvements in patients with duodenal ulcer
who received chiropractic care. The researchers concluded, “Manipulation
to remove spinal dysfunction not only relieves pain, but has a healing
effect significantly better than standard drug therapy.”
...............................................................................................................................
Pikalov AA, MD,
Vyatcheslav VK, Use of spinal manipulative therapy in the treatment of
duodenal ulcer: a pilot study. JMPT, 1994 17(5):310-313.
Jorgensen, LS and Fossgreen, J, Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology,
1990, Dec.;25(12):1235-1241.
H Kamieth, Pathogenic importance of the thoracic portion of the vertebral
spine, Journal of the American Medical Association (Nov. 15, 1958), p.
1586.
DeBoer, KF et al., Acute effects of spinal manipulation on
gastrointestinal myoelectric activity in conscious rabbits. Manuelle
Medicine, 1988, 3, pp.85-94.
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