𝙂𝙧𝙚𝙖𝙩 𝙞𝙣𝙛𝙤: Trauma & Disease

Is Fibromyalgia Caused by Childhood Trauma?

By Pat Anson, Editor                                                                                                                            September 28, 2016
An article in a peer-reviewed medical journal that promotes a “new way of thinking” about chronic pain – and its possible ties to childhood trauma — is stirring some controversy in the fibromyalgia community.
In the article, published in The Journal 0f Family Practice, co-authors Bennet Davis, MD, and Todd Vanderah, PhD,  say there may be “psychological reasons” for chronic pain that is not caused by tissue injuries or damage to the nervous system – what they call a “third type of pain.”
“We hypothesize that this pain may be the consequence of changes in nervous system function that arise from developmental trauma, other traumatic experiences in a patient’s life, or mental health disorders. It is this third type of pain that may offer us insights into conditions such as fibromyalgia,” they wrote
Davis and Vanderah say the third type of pain can be recognized when a patient makes an “emotionally charged presentation” that they are in severe pain when there is no physical evidence of tissue injury or pathology.
Where then does the pain come from? Davis and Vanderah say childhood accidents, trauma and abuse are so emotionally upsetting that they can lead to long-term changes     in the central nervous system that amplify pain.
“We believe that these changes lead to a bias toward hyperactivation of emotional pain circuits, which leads to the emotionally laden pain behaviors that often seem out of proportion to tissue pathology,” they said.

“Perhaps this will explain what is happening with some of our patients who complain         of pain ‘all over’ and who are often classified as having fibromyalgia.”
Fibromyalgia is a poorly understood disorder that is characterized by deep tissue pain, fatigue, depression, mood swings and insomnia. The exact cause of fibromyalgia is unknown.
Article Called “Dangerous”
Are Davis and Vanderah onto something? Or is their theory simply a new variation            of the “it’s all in your head” explanation that many patients get from doctors?
“This article is dangerous,” says Jan Chambers, President of the National Fibromyalgia and Chronic Pain Association. “The slippery slope created by this article for a quick shove-off of patients with fibromyalgia generally to a psychiatrist or psychologist for talk therapy is very concerning.
“Singling out childhood psychological trauma without rigorous research as a ‘third type of pain’ and potential cause of fibromyalgia is dangerous because this could become an easy reason for medical doctors to further dismiss pain patients with challenging treatments from their care or withhold needed medical treatments or prescriptions. Additionally, other medical conditions could go undiagnosed with their symptoms attributed to being     a psychological aspect of childhood trauma.”
Chambers says research has found that about 70 percent of people with fibromyalgia     have neck pain – and many also have a history of whiplash-type injuries – indicating   there is a physical explanation for fibromyalgia.
“When people receive appropriate care and spinal rehabilitation for their cervical spine, their fibromyalgia symptoms significantly reduce,” Chambers said in an email to PNN. “Several prominent fibromyalgia researchers have known this for years but have not convinced medical doctors to recruit chiropractors to help alleviate the suffering of their patients with fibromyalgia who have significant neck or low back pain.”
Another patient advocate disputes the notion that chronic pain is linked to childhood trauma and abuse.
“We would be hard pressed to find anyone who hasn’t experienced psychological trauma  at some point in their life,” says Celeste Cooper, a retired nurse and fibromyalgia sufferer.
“So, are we to assume they will all have multiple sclerosis, nerve impingement, Ehler’s Danlos, CRPS, fibromyalgia, myofascial pain syndrome, Crohn’s disease, chronic fatigue, cancer, etc.? Childhood trauma is a horse of a different color and should be left to those who specialize in this type of care. I cannot connect the dots on that one. Mental illness should be addressed by a trained psychiatrist and psychologist, not someone treating  adult chronic pain.”
Davis is a pain management specialist at the Integrative Pain Center of Arizona in Tucson, while Vanderah is a Professor of Pharmacology at the University of Arizona.
Davis said he developed his theory about the connection between childhood trauma and fibromyalgia after listening to thousands of patients’ stories. He believes there is a connection between emotional and physical pain that every doctor needs to understand.
“The nervous system is the connector between tissues and mind/consciousness, and every health provider needs to understand the nervous system to do their job, especially primary care providers,” Davis wrote in an email to PNN. “The artificial separation of mind and body represents a paradigm that has led the American health care system to multiple   dead ends (including a dead end in understanding fibromyalgia), to misdiagnoses, to unnecessary surgeries and tests, to accusing patients that ‘it’s in your head’ when it       most definitely is not, and has contributed to nearly bankrupting our health care system.”
How would Davis and Vanderah evaluate and treat fibromyalgia? If a physical cause of    the pain cannot be found, they recommend doctors look for signs of “psychologically traumatic experiences” in patients, and assess them for anxiety and depression.
Recommended treatments include counseling, cognitive behavioral therapy, hypnotherapy, post-traumatic stress disorder therapies and anti-depressant medications such as Cymbalta (duloxetine) and Effexor (venlafaxine). Interestingly, they do not recommend any type of pain medication – either opioids or over-the-counter pain relievers.
“Above all, when you are caring for someone who has pain without clear tissue pathology or who has recognized intensified emotional pain processing, reassure the person that     the pain experience is not in his or her head, but rather in his or her nervous system,”   they said. “Such discussions go a long way toward helping patients understand their experience, as well as feel validated. And that can lead to improved compliance with therapy going forward.”

The Connection Between Inflammation and Breast Cancer.

Response to traumatic events vary significantly amongst people and with one major physical symptom being gastrointestinal problems.

Whereas, Estrogen dominance, hypothyroidism, histamine intolerance, and high cortisol are all closely connected, and in fact they all stem from the same root cause. Fix it and the rest will fall into place. Start fixing the wrong one on its own & you’ll make the rest worse. I’m reducing thyroid medicine with increasing natural progesterone and adrenal herbs.

Also meditation. Mind body connection is very important in healing.  It’s also imp to         do some diet changes … check out Dr. Izabella Wentz is a clinical pharmacist who was diagnosed with Hashimoto’s in 2009. Dr. Wentz combined. . . .emerging research with  clinical expertise to identify and remove all the triggers that also caused her to develop Hashimoto’s. On this episode of Bulletproof Radio discover new information about the auto-immune epidemic, what Hashimoto’s looks like, and more about the possibilities     for a cure.

15-year Survivor Jane McLelland on How to Starve Cancer: After being mishandled and fobbed off by the National Health Service  (in Britain)  for over a year after abnormal pap smears  she eventually  went to a private clinic  and  was diagnosed with Stage 4 Cervical Cancer – which stage 4 is considered terminal by traditional medical oncologists. As Jane puts it “there is no Stage 5”.

With a scientific background as a physiotherapist and showing the ingenuity of a    seasoned sailor, she did not take this diagnosis lying down.

She devised a very well researched combination of:

A cancer starving diet
Cheap out of patent off label drugs (with much less severe side effects than chemotherapy)
Supplements
Exercise at the right times
Intravenous Vitamin C
Chemotherapy
to defeat her cancer. Using her protocols should mean that the amount of chemotherapy that is given can be reduced. She even went on to cure herself of leukemia brought on by her original chemotherapy.
Chemotherapy drugs target fast-dividing cells but the “cancer stem cells are resistant to conventional chemotherapy and radiation treatment and cancer stem cells are very likely to be the origin of cancer metastasis.”1 Jane has provided a map showing how to block the main metabolic pathways that feed cancer, attacking cancer on all its fronts also including cancer stem cells. While cancers can mutate in thousands of ways the number of pathways that feed them (metabolic pathways) is much more limited.

Care Oncology has set up a clinic in London and now the USA, using many of her ideas.
There is not one ‘cure’ for cancer but many cures. I believe Jane has provided the basis    for them.

A modern-day ‘Cancer Sherlock Holmes’, Jane discovered that a cancer-starving diet, powerful supplements and a handful of old, forgotten, low-toxicity drugs, when taken together, acted synergistically, magnifying each of their anti-cancer effects many times. Like magic, her terminal cancer just melted away. In this truly ground-breaking book, Jane takes us  through her remarkable,  heart-breaking journey,  and also the medical discoveries she made on the way.                                                                                                    Using herself as a human guinea pig, she worked out    the best drugs & supplements         to starve her own cancer in an easy-to-follow ‘Metro Map’. She has expanded this route map to show which fuel pipelines you need to block for every type of cancer, so you too  can create your own cancer-starving cocktail. Tragically many simple old drugs have been overlooked in the race for the latest patentable ‘game changers’. Is the answer already out there? Jane believes it is.

Bit by bit she has pieced the puzzle together, demystified its complexity, and produced a simple protocol. This book will answer all the burning questions you face when you begin to explore complementary cancer care. Which ‘off-label’ drugs and supplements should you take? Should you try the ketogenic diet? Should you fast? Is fat safe? How much and when should you exercise? Jane explains why each patient needs a personalized approach and, importantly, how to work this out.  In her book:  How to Starve cancer, which is part Erin Brockovich, and also part Dallas Buyers Club, is a compelling story of resilience and determination in the face of impossible odds.  If you or a loved one has cancer,  this book     is a read. Even if you have been told – that nothing more can be done,  Jane will show you this is almost certainly not true.

Trauma + Oxidative Stress = Chronic Inflammation = Disease!!!

References
1. See article on Cancer Stem Cells. (Source: The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, accessed March 2019 )

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