100% Correlation Found Between Spinal Irritation & Disease
The experience of many practice members who receive chiropractic adjustments is that with regular chiropractic care they feel healthier, don’t get sick as often, and certain body ills tend to improve without drugs or other medical intervention.
How does this occur if chiropractic simply moves bones and reduces joint inflammation?
The answer was discovered almost 100 years ago. Back in 1921, a medical doctor, Henry Winsor, set about to understand if, in fact, there was a correlation between certain areas of the spine having misalignments (the official term is subluxations) and malfunction of organs.
Dr Winsor hailed from Haverford, Pennsylvania and he posed the following question: “Chiropractors claim that by adjusting one vertebra [bone of the spine], they can relieve stomach troubles and ulcers; by adjusting another, menstrual cramps; and by adjusting other parts of the spine conditions such as kidney diseases, constipation, heart disease, thyroid conditions, and lung disease may resolve – but how?”
After graduating from medical school, Dr. Winsor was inspired by chiropractic and osteopathic literature to experiment with these concepts. He planned to dissect human and animal cadavers to see if there was a relationship between any diseased internal organs and the vertebrae (bones of the spine) associated with the nerves that traveled to those organs.
If one or more vertebrae are out of place (misaligned) causing inflammation, this inflammation can put pressure on a nerve traveling from the spinal cord and going to either muscles or organs, having a negative influence on their functioning.
The University of Pennsylvania gave Dr. Winsor permission to carry out his experiments. The following are Dr. Winsor’s results:
“221 structures other than the spine were found diseased. Of these, 212 were observed to belong to the same sympathetic (nerve) segments as the vertebrae in curvature. In other words, there was nearly a 100% correlation between minor curvatures of the spine and diseases of the internal organs.”
Heart Disease All 20 cases with heart and pericardium conditions had the upper five thoracic vertebrae misaligned (T1-T5).
Pancreas All 3 cases with pancreas disease had spinal misalignments in the mid-thoracic area (T5-T9).
Lung Disease All 26 cases of lung disease had spinal misalignments in the upper thoracic area (T1-T5).
Spleen All 11 cases with spleen disease had spinal misalignments in the mid-thoracic area (T5-T9).
Stomach Disease All 9 cases of stomach disease had spinal misalignments in the mid-thoracic (T5-T9) area.
Kidney All 17 cases with kidney disease were out of alignment in the lower thoracic area (T10-T12).
Liver Disease All 13 cases of liver disease had misalignments in the mid-thoracic area (T5-T9).
Prostate and Bladder Disease All 8 cases with prostate disease had the lumbar vertebrae misaligned (L1-L5).
Gallbladder All 5 cases of gallstone disease had spinal misalignments in the mid-thoracic area (T5-T9).
Uterus 2 cases with uterine conditions had the second lumbar (L2) misaligned.
The “T” and “L” mentioned above refer to the thoracic (T) and lumbar (L) spine respectively. Most nerves traveling to major organs exit the spine from the mid back or thoracic region. The reproductive organs sit low in the body and they are therefore associated with the nerves from the lumbar spine.
Dr. Winsor’s results are published in The Medical Times and are found in any medical library. Winsor was not alone in his findings. Similar studies by other researchers have confirmed Dr. Winsor’s conclusion that degenerated and misaligned spines have a high correlation with disease processes.
So what are your thoughts? Does it seem important to keep the vertebra of your spine in the correct alignment?
Does it make sense now how a ‘back problem’ can have far reaching effects, way beyond local pain?
Does this make you want to get your spine and that of your children and family checked?
The miracles of chiropractic may not be as well known as they should be, but the scientific evidence supporting how they occur is anything BUT new.
Do yourself a favor and get checked for spinal misalignments. Your future health depends on it.
Winsor H. Sympathetic segmental disturbances II. The evidences of the association, in dissected cadavers, of visceral disease with vertebral deformities of the same sympathetic segments. The Medical Times, November 1921, pp. 267-271.