Friday, February 12, 2016

Neck or Shoulder Pain Have Something to Do with Paranasal Sinuses



Hello, I am a country doctor, Lee Woojeong.

Some suffer from chronic neck or shoulder pain but cannot find the right answer, then please
check our if you habe sinus problems.


Neck or Shoulder Pain Have Something to Do with Paranasal Sinuses

Q. Does having a thick neck or having a shoulder pain have anything to do with the paranasal sinuses?
 
A. There are people who have thick neck. According to statistics, snorers tend to have thicker necks than most people. There is also study suggesting clear difference in the level of cholesterol and blood sugar between the people with different neck thickness.
 
Thick neck does not necessarily depend on weight gain. The skin on the neck does not have much fatty layer as in the abdomen area, but rather it consists of a thin layer of skin. Therefore, its unique feature does not allow you to store fat. In the neck, functional tissues, such as the ones who responsible for immune system: the lymph gland, tonsil and the ones responsible for secretion: hormone secreting thyroid, the parotid and submaxillary gland. Those are secreting tissues, similar to the nasal mucosa. In unfavorable environment, those secreting tissues swell up and carry out their functions. If this prolongs, the neck thickens gradually.
 
If you feel your neck has thickened over time, this could indicate your head is not clear. Treatments to vitalize the functions of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses, which functions as the anti-overheating device for the brain, refreshes the head and enhances the blood circulation to the secreting tissues responsible for the immune system, in turn, overall improvement made to these tissues slim the neck down.
 
Observing hypertension patients, they tend to have thick flesh in the central part of their necks. They suffer from neck and shoulder stiffness and feel dull pain in the areas constantly, and over time those become hard and thick. Until the paranasal sinuses treatment came along, I employed cupping therapy. It relieved the tension but there was a rebound after several days.
 
But when the paranasal sinuses are restored to normal, especially the sphenoid sinuses that is located at the farthest backside, the stiffness in the neck goes away without treating the neck itself. Through clinical experience, many patients have experienced their flesh in the back of the neck reduced in size.
 
Many find the cause of the stiffness in the neck from having a wrong posture, but this new finding of obstructed sphenoid sinuses causing the stiffness open the new perspectives to assure direct and effective treatment.
 
 
 
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