Added: 3 years ago
From: coucoui6
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  • He'll have to give up the handicapped parking spot now.

  • Chiropractic miracle? Chance bloody event, more like!

  • @Gilbomeister The only "Chance bloody event..." is when a poor bloak undergoes the knife. Chiropractic for all!

  • HOw far down is the trigeminal nucleus? At the very least, you have to admit that the brain stem passes through the foramen magnum, so a misalighnment at c1 occiput would produce chord pressure at that part of the brain stem. I'm just a third year chiro student, and I already know this. MD's hate applied anatomy. Don't they?

  • Thats due to an accident.....a very different aspect. MDs are good at trauma and accident care, but not at health and wellness.

  • @drwilby Cut and dry. ADIO!

  • I am a chiropractic student and while in lab a girl next to me was getting an atlas adjustment and sprang up and took her glasses off because she could see better. The professor wasn't surprised and said that it happens quite frequently. Just as gravity can't be ignored even though it is unexplainable, so to with chiropractic.

  • Awesome isn't it? While an intern I was asked to work on a newborn with one that drifted towards the nose. The eye centered after the first atlas toggle and occiput lift. Good luck in school and looking forward to joining us in helping the millions.

  • @chiropractic47

    An intern like Monica Lewinsky? And there I was thinking you are no bloody use at all!

  • @Gilbomeister Most trust Monica Lewinsky rather than a  needle, pill, and scalpel pushing/slashing MD. Next!

  • WOW! This is awesome!

  • If you are reading this and have eyesight problems you can heal back to 20/20 also. If it is believed that your eyesight can go bad, then it can also go good.

    "There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle." --A. Einstein

  • It also has to do with the meridians and emotions that run through the body. Relief may have effected his emotions as well.

    What people call miracles is just the unexplainable. If you cant figure it out its a miracle, or it seems like the impossible. Everything is possible.

    "It would be possible to describe everything scientifically, but it would make no sense; it would be without meaning, as if you described a Beethoven symphony as a variation of wave pressure." -- Albert Einstein

  • This is pretty amazing but the problem is...nerves to and from the eyes do not pass the spinal cord...

  • The optic nerve has a synaptic lead that runs to brain stem, synapses and returns to optic chiasm.

    SG, DC

  • The optic nerve passes right under the pituitary then to the thalamus. It does not lead to the brain stem.

    AND...any connection from the brain stem to the cerebrum will not benefit from manipulation as the brain stem sits above the spine.

  • When the spinal cord is tractioned due to anterior head carriage and loss of cervical lodosis, it causes a direct effect of pressure on the medulla. The most important area chiropractic works on IS the brainstem

  • That may be so but that still doesn't explain what happened to this patient.

  • @jvelos3 Why don't you fukin explain what happened to this patient! Asshole!

  • Psst...psst (whisper), AtlantisChiro, there are asshole medic trolls following you on this video. Their names are jvelos and bjs8145. You can see bjs8145's videos on YouTube (bjs8145 speaks out and bjs8145 destroys chiropractic). Otherwise (continuing in a low whisper), I am a very successful chiropractic doctor too and they follow me around too. Be well and keep up the great work.

  • haha I like how you think. Anyone with their head up their colon is never going to see the light, we can only pray they do

  • "They" said the same thing in 1895when the first chiro adjustment restored hearing. Many of the nerves that regulate blood(trophic) to the head pass thru the brainstem. No one said it was spinal pressure on the optic nerve.

  • @jvelos3 You obviously don't know all on anatomy and physiology. Go to chiropractic school for a "Real Doctors" education.

  • @jvelos3 So shmuck, if the brain stem is inflammed how does nerve and arterial feed plus venous drain occur unimpeded to the upper brain? This is why the world understands that the chiropractic doctor (DC) recieves 500 more hours (5200 hrs.) than MD's (4600 hrs) in all the critical advanced health science subjects. You (jvelos3) has been bitch slapped so many times by chiropractic that we have all become concerned for your mental staus and safety. Chiropractic Now!

  • @chiropractic47 even a shmuck knows that MDs get 4600 hours in the first 2 years of school and then go on to do another 2 years in hospitals while you were still spreading your 5200 hours out across 4 years.

    Then MDs do residiency that chiropractors dont.

    Stop trying to pretend your as trained as an MD because you just proved your not

  • @servorules Shmuck, MD's recieve 4600 over 4 years; first 2 yrs class room then next 2 years are diluted classroom while intern. Then they can "elect"...yes! Not all states require a "paid" aka salaried residency; aka "training two watch people die in hospital training". Chiropractic doctoral candidates do four years classroom while two years internship...watching and learning how people 'live". Chiropractic does not involve itself in ER med. but in the prevention of it. Chiropractic Now!

  • @chiropractic47 I didnt know you could get more ignirant.

    That reply is proof enough that your no kind of doctor. The clerkship years are not internship, that comes AFTER graduation and ALL states require at least one year of postgraduate training for licensure (most these days require 2).

    Im guessing your "internship" is done while your still in school.

    You really are a stupid man...

  • @servorules The only thing that qualifies me as stupid is replying to your lack of bilateral hemispheric thought processes. Darn! I should know better to leave a brain dead boy such as yourself alone...to eventaul death by "failure mounting an escalator. Chiropractic Now!

  • @chiropractic47 sorry, I forgot your still realing from the bitch slapping you took when Simin Singh WON!!!!!

    That would explain a few things about you odvious brain damage.

    Bye the way how many night did you spend on call/how many babys did you deliver/how codes did you do during you little chiropractic "internship"?

  • @servorules I'm proud to "servo" you another chiropractic bitch slap; Though the DC is trained to deliver babies (Illinoise licenses DC's to deliver) we designed our methods not to deliver babies but to provide critical spinal adjustments as a means to relieve nervous system impingements or enhance its function. Shmuck, we can say this blue in the face and you still won't get it. MD's shine in the ER but kill outside its sliding doors. Chiropractic Now!

  • @chiropractic47 wow, one state hasnt got around to changing their out of date laws. Does ANY chiorpractor in that state even have OB privileges? Bill Gates couldnt afford the malpractic rates they would charge a chiropractor that want to play an OB.

    GIve it up... your just an embarrassment to wanna be docs everywhere.

  • @servorules The average cost per year for chiropractric malpractice insurance is $1800, whilst MD's pay anywhere between $55.000 and $ 300,000/year (U.S. Insurance Institute). I pay $1500/year chiropractic malpractice insurance. ADIO! Chiropractic!

  • @servorules snap...that was a b*tch slap well delivered.

  • @jns124able Yes, I happen to agree that I served the medic a very well placed bitch slap. ADIO! Chiropractic!

  • @jvelos3 pssst just a heads up...chiro47 once asserted that impingement of the optic chiasm would produce unilateral blindness...just ignore him.

  • @jns124able Shmuck! I wrote that an upper cervical subluxation can cause swelling about the brain stem which in turn can cause both neurological and vascular insufficiency to the optic chiasm. DORK! Chiropractic Rules!

  • @chiropractic47 was this the same journal that you cited which self identified a study as double blind...which it was not? well....THAT kind of error isnt concerning in a reputable journal at all is it? *rolls eyes* hehehe

  • @jns124able Yes, reputable chiropractic journals they are. Thank you for your support for chiropractic.

  • @chiropractic47

    Reputable chiropractic journal? Dude, you win the award for oxymoron of the day!

  • @jvelos3 what controls the blood supply to the optic nerve? Try looking up Nucleus Tractus Solitarius, which receives monosynaptic, post synaptic afferent signals from the Nucleus Intermedius, which in turn gets direct input from C1, C2 and C3...

    Better check your neuroanatomy before you start making claims!

  • @atlasdoc2 You the doc! ADIO!

  • @jvelos3 HOw far down is the trigeminal nucleus? At the very least, you have to admit that the brain stem passes through the foramen magnum, so a misalighnment at c1 occiput would produce chord pressure at that part of the brain stem. I'm just a third year chiro student, and I already know this. MD's hate applied anatomy. Don't they?

  • @skinkusmetalicus You are going to be a great DC. ADIO!

  • @jvelos3 thats not correct. The optic chiasm is the structure passing under the pituitary...impingement here produces bitemporal hemianopia, not unilateral blindness as seen in this patient.

  • @jvelos3 Shmuck, yes we know the optic nerve doesn't lead to the brain stem. What we do know that an upper cervical subluxation can cause swelling of the brain stem thus impedance to the neurological and vascular structures above...You're a silly medic, leave the tuff stuff to us chiropractic doctors.

  • Love to see you respond to jvelos3 point. We both that you cant because chiropractic fall flat on its face on this point... but then again, when has chiropractic ever been subject to the laws of anatomy and physiology to back up its "miracle" claims?

  • see above

  • MEDICAL doctors are baffled...that's because they give no credit to the body being a self-regulating and healing organism. Why anyone buys into drugs and surgery is beyond me. I guess it is from the continual brainwashing we are all exposed to every day in the media.

  • Right on man!!!

  • if I have a broken foot...I will have surgery to fix it...and pain meds so I am not crying in pain 24/7.

    drugs is such a broad word...are you also against insulin, chemotherapy, HIV drugs, antibiotics?

  • @jvelos3 shmuck, your writing about emergency medicine...we all need emergency medicine in an emergency. We are posting on field medicine (outside the ER) and how it is the third largest cause of death in the U.S. at 800,000= deaths by medicien each year, Gary Null, PhD, et al, etc.). Keep up medic troll shiller or get out out of this forum! Chiropractic Now!

  • @jvelos3 No shmuck, but chiropractors are against idiots such as yourself that peddle drugs for every sniffle and sneeze.

  • @drwilby of course we give credit to a self regulating system and healing organism. what are you talking about...homeostasis and mechanisms of healing, health promotion and disease prevention are core principles taught in medical schools.

  • @jns124able Medical schools "DO NOT"! teach health and wellness. Chiropractic schools teach health and wellness...500 more hours than medical schools.

  • @chiropractic47 hehehe he comes in and carpet bombs the forum with stupidity and then claims "victory" with a boisterous "chiropractic!" lulz....

    Yes medical schools teach health and wellness you mental midget...lulz at you xD

  • @jns124able Oh no they don't bucko!...Medical schools absolutely DO NOT teach health and wellness. Chiropractic schools obviously teach health and wellness. I guess it's me to shake your brain from slumber...whoa is me....

  • @chiropractic47 oh yes they do. Id know...cause Im in it. And it's spelled woe...not whoa...I wish whoa was you lol...lemme guess..."chiro!"? lol

  • @jns124able Sorry medic.."whoa" is spelled "whoa", not "woe". Hey we have something in common (LOL). My DC took me 9 years: 4 year undergraduate degree in biology and 5 classroom hour years (5200 hrs vs your 4600 hrs) in chiro school. So what ya got? Chiropractic for all!

  • @chiropractic47 PS...medical schools have (at least here in Canada) 2 - 4 years premedical training, then 2.5 years of academic study...then minimum of another 3.5 years clinical clerkship/academics. When you cite 500 extra hours...are you considering the residency programs? Many of which are 5+ years extra studies bud...lol...hoo boy is the math that tough or what?

  • @jns124able Of course I'm citing that the chiropractic curricula is the same but 500 more classroom hours than the medical curricula. This is common knowledge. More! chiropractic students simultaneously complete two years internship in clinics and hospitals often alongside medical students, whilst completing 5200 hours classroom instruction. But wait! By design, chiropractic doesn't require a "PAID" residency. That's correct folks! Residency is when an MD is paid to learn about disease. Chiro!

  • @chiropractic47 Ill have spent 9 years getting my training. Yes residents are paid...you say it like its a scandal lol ...uh whats that thing you say when carpet bombing us with your genius?...oh yeah "chiro!" lulz just go away man....;P

  • My Harvey Lillard happens to have four legs.

  • WOW !! Can he make my wife go blind and then disappear?? =]

  • Ha ha ha, that's funny.

  • Cool.....in the words of long-time Palmer professor, G. O. Schmiedel, D.C., "Every chiropractor must have his Harvey Lillard."

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