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Student and Therapist Newsletter Archive + CST and epilepsy? - December 05 ***QUESTION*** I have a prospective client with severe epilepsy - Grand Mal Seizures. He's had it since his mid teens and he is now in his 50-60s. Epilepsy runs in the family, but he has also suffered several incidents of trauma to the head, so I don't know if he has inherited the epilepsy or if it has been caused by trauma, or a combination. And possibly there are lots of other restrictions making the epilepsy worse. I haven't treated anyone for epilepsy before. Is it advisable to treat them. I might be able to do so much for him, but since I don't know anything about what might happen seizure-wise if I do treat him, I'm a bit scared he might have a huge seizure and die. What is your experience or
what do you know of treating epilepsy with CranioSacral? Lastly I would like to ask your advise on the frequency of treatments. I know you treat once a week for as long as it takes. In my training in Sweden the norm was once a week for the first couple of times and then every 3 weeks, to allow the continuing process in the "system" after a session. I have gravitated to treating every two weeks in the last year or so, as I find every 3 weeks too seldom. Can you give me any rational explanation as to why every week would be better than every 2 or every 3 weeks? Thanks for any advise you
can give. >>>MY COMMENTS: You need to see people every week, Eva, because if you don't they'll start wearing their underwear on the OUTSIDE and BLAME YOU!!!! No hang on, that's the irrational answer. During treatment, restriction patterns in the patient's system begin to release and in a way their body returns to its pre-traumatised state. With the people who come to see us, the restriction patterns are usually ingrained in their system. If the patterns weren't ingrained then the people wouldn't need to see us, would they. You could think of what happens during treatment as their system 'remembering' and so dropping the 'habit' of being restricted. But habits being habitual and all, in the week following treatment their body will start to go back into the habit of restriction. 2 steps forward, 1 step back, kind of thing. I have found that if I leave it for longer than a week, particularly at the beginning of a treatment program, then the habitual patterns of restriction will come back significantly. 2 steps forward, 1.8 steps back, kind of thing. So at longer than weekly intervals the whole thing is less efficient and just takes longer and costs the person more in the long run. Towards the end of a treatment program I will go to 2 weekly intervals, at least once. Meaning if the person has a good, symptom free 2 weeks then we are often finished. Now your epilepsy question. So a thorough check of all the obvious places in that area is a good place to start. Coronal suture, both pterions, falx cerebri as it meets the frontal bone and then on down to the crista gali and how the ethmoid is sitting generally. I generally find that if there is a sutural compression it is usually caused by a restriction in the underlying membranes. So check the falx and the membrane lining the frontal and parietal bones. I have also found it useful to check the central sulcus. Sometimes there can be restrictions there that, once released, alleviate the epileptic symptoms. Check that the frontal and parietal lobes are separated. The energetic component of epilepsy is like a build
up of, what feels like static electricity, in the head that releases itself
in the form of a While we're on the subject of fits and seizures, I'll quickly run through the different types. Tonic/clonic or Grand Mal seizure: Absence or petit mal seizures: Myoclonic seizures Eva, you sound a little concerned about whether your prospective patient will have a seizure on the table. If you are going to treat someone with epilepsy you need to accept the fact that this may happen. Witnessing epileptic seizures can be disturbing if you're not familiar with them. The person with epilepsy is familiar and so will their partner or family. So have someone come with them and be in the room. Having someone present who IS familiar with the process will make it easier for you. The length of time required for treatment depends on the source of the epilepsy. If it's stemming from birth or an accident it generally won't take too long to see results. If it is caused by the after effects of meningitis it can take longer because you are working with scar tissue which you are encouraging to heal in a new way. Standard medical practice with epilepsy is to try and manage it with various drugs. When you palpate a body with these types of drugs, it will often feel like you are trying to palpate through a layer of cotton wool. This makes it hard to feel what is going on in the first place and then whether your treatment is having any real effect. In the course of the treatment program you will reach a point where the insulating effect of the drugs is making it hard to know how much more work you need to do. It's a bit like an iceberg with nine tenths of it covered by water. You need to drain off the water a bit to see what else there is to do. BUT, you need to be careful how you handle this. Discourage the patient from doing any kind of self medicating. Strongly encourage them to go and see the prescribing doctor and ask them to reduce the medication. That way the Doctor is included in the process. The Doctor will often say there is no need, particularly in light of the fact that the person has gone from having 1 grand mal a day, to 1 a week. The drugs are obviously working. If the patient perseveres, most doctors will relent particularly if the patient says they would prefer not to be on a drug for the rest of their lives. Doctors being very aware of the side effects of drugs and all.
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