The Cranial Doc | A Chiropractic & Cranial Mastery Show for Pediatric, Family, and Neurologically-based Chiropractors
Your patient feels incredible after the adjustment. Two days later they're tight again, back on your table three times a week to maintain it. That's not your technique failing. That's a loop you only interrupted at one point. This episode breaks down the actual neurology connecting the jaw and the pelvic floor, and why neither one resolves when you treat it in isolation. What we get into: * The category two pattern: why an unstable pelvis ends with the jaw clamped shut as the terminal anchor * The two brainstem tracts (reticulospinal and lateral vestibulospinal) broadcasting one global tone change down the entire spine and cranium at once * Dysafferentation vs segmental facilitation, and why the decades-long argument over which one matters is the wrong fight. Both run in the same patient at the same time. * The soda bottle: the cleanest way to explain all of this to an exhausted postpartum mom or a skeptical engineer * Why your EDS, hypermobility, and POTS patients hold for a few days and then snap back * The three points you have to work to actually break the loop: lumbosacral, upper cervical and cranial, and the autonomic state Big takeaways: * The jaw is not just downstream. It clamps because the pelvis is unstable, then corrupts the vestibular input organizing the whole compensation. It drives the loop as much as it reflects it. * This is why adjusting the pelvis moves the jaw picture and adjusting the cranium drops pelvic floor tension. You're changing the broadcast running both. * Screen for it on intake. Jaw tension plus any pelvic floor complaint, plus poor sleep, is the triad hiding in plain sight. Your patients have the symptoms. Nobody told them they were connected. Real-world: the dentist who keeps sending you the cases they can't crack. The postpartum mom whose pelvic floor PT has worked for months and can't get the floor to release because nobody looked at the cranium. The kid with jaw tension and bladder urgency who is a category two until proven otherwise. You see these every week. The cranial piece is where most docs stop short. It takes real specificity to change the brainstem involvement. That's what the Foundations of Cranial Adjusting course is built around. Full list of upcoming courses and intensives: thecranialdoc.com/training [http://thecranialdoc.com/training] Share this with a doc who's tired of their adjustments not holding. 00:00 Summer Recording Chaos 01:37 Jaw Pelvis Connection 04:06 Pelvic Tilt Mechanics 05:47 Development Chicken Egg 08:59 Brainstem Tone Pathways 11:41 TMJ Vestibular Feedback 15:21 Part Two Sensory Theory 16:23 Dysafferentation vs Facilitation 24:00 Top Half Jaw Anchor 28:27 Clinical Triad Evaluation 31:59 Treatment Strategy Findings 33:35 Explain It Simply Referrals 36:15 Closing Loop Training
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