by Neil Bossenger | Jun 22, 2016 | Research, Spinewave Bulletin
Magnesium, the second most abundant intracellular cation, is essential in many intracellular processes and appears to play an important role in migraine pathogenesis. Routine blood tests do not reflect true body magnesium stores since <2% is in the measurable,...
by Neil Bossenger | Jan 15, 2016 | Case of the month, Cases, Spinewave Bulletin, Symptoms
I think my case is unique insofar that my condition is almost cured against all odds of Western medicine – KA Dystonia disrupts the nervous system’s ability to allow the brain and muscles to communicate. How the body controls muscle movement is very...
by Neil Bossenger | Oct 1, 2015 | Case of the month, Cases, Spinewave Bulletin, Symptoms
He even went through periods where he could not walk properly – CK I’ve been told personally that a little gluten never hurt anyone. Clinical experience proves otherwise. The combination of misunderstanding, ignorance and rise in everything pervasively...
by Neil Bossenger | Nov 19, 2014 | Research, Spinewave Bulletin
The forces imposed on the cervical spines of passengers of colliding vehicles are tremendous and the damage to the vehicles is no indication of the extent of injury imposed on them. Research this year also showed in children ages 12 and younger, falls were the most...
by Neil Bossenger | Aug 6, 2014 | Case of the month, Cases, Spinewave Bulletin, Symptoms
This case is the hallmark of having a progressive, working diagnosis and not getting stuck on one idea. Disease processes can progress rapidly and any hunch or potential red flag should warrant reexamination, a second opinion, blood tests, or new imaging such as X ray...