CHICAGO (Ivanhoe Newswire) -- About 72 million adults
in the United States are living with high blood pressure. That's one in three
people. Statistics show only 35 percent of them have it under control. Now,
research shows a spinal adjustment may actually help control blood pressure.
Chiropractor Marshall Dickholtz, Sr., DC, has been fixing spines for 50 years.
"Helping sick people is the most wonderful thing you possibly can do in life.
I've dedicated my life to it," Dr. Dickholtz says.
He works solely on the vital top bone of the spine at the base of the brain,
called the atlas.
"Think about it. If your neck is not balancing your head, it's like blowing a
fuse. Your wonderful brain does not control your body as well," Dr. Dickholtz
says.
He says a misaligned atlas will raise blood pressure.
"When you have a pinched brain stem, it closes out your arteries. If the
arteries close down, the blood pressure has to be higher to go through those
arteries," Dr. Dickholtz says.
A machine checks alignment. After taking detailed X-rays and precise
measurements, he demonstrates how he does the adjustment. You can see the
difference.
A study by University of Chicago doctors shows the treatment lowers blood
pressure by 17 points. After her alignment, 80-year-old Maribeth Zickert is now
off the blood pressure drugs she's taken for more than five years.
"At my age, to be on no medication is almost a miracle I think," Zickert says.
Denise Niemann had high blood pressure, too. Before her adjustment, her pressure
was 144 over 98.
"After one treatment, my blood pressure was 115 over 76," Niemann says.
"Our high blood pressure research, there were, the average age was 53 and they
had 40 years of damage in their spine that could have been taken care of years
before and maybe never had high blood pressure," Dr. Dickholtz says.
To get the same effect, doctors say you’d have to take two blood pressure drugs.
The study was published in the Journal of Human Hypertension. Dr. Dickholtz says
most people do have an atlas that is out of alignment. It usually does not cause
pain, so it often goes undetected and untreated.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
Dr. Marshall Dickholtz
http://nuccadickholtzsr.com