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Hip Perhaps... what kind of professional would be the best to consult? A chiropractor? It seems a bit scary too, having someone treat you in such voulnarable areas of the body. Are there any risks involved?
Perhaps just find a regular
atlas profilax therapist. I have not tried this therapy myself, but quite a few people on this forum have.
But is the question here, "Does TMJ alignment have the potential to improve some health conditions?" Or is the question, "Does TMJ misalignment cause ME"? The title of the thread is "ME caused by squeezed nerve?"
Having read this thread, it appears to me that while misalignments affecting the vagus nerve can cause some symptoms that overlap with ME, there doesn't seem to be any real indication that it causes CCC/ICC ME. It looks more like a possible misdiagnosis situation to me. Of course, there could be people who have both misalignments and ME and so treating the misalignment could substantially improve their condition, but it wouldn't cure their ME.
Well, regarding the question of does TMJ misalignment cause ME/CFS: the interesting thing about TMJ dysfunction is that this is known to be a common comorbidity of ME/CFS. For any disease comorbidity, the consideration always arises: is the comorbidity a
cause or a
consequence of the disease? Now if TMJ dysfunction were a causal factor in ME/CFS, rather than a consequence of ME/CFS, then treating TMJ dysfunction could conceivably bring improvements in ME/CFS symptoms.
This applies to other ME/CFS comorbidities too, such as IBS. IBS is very common in ME/CFS, and many patients like myself had IBS for many years before they developed ME/CFS. So this always make me wonder whether IBS might play a causal role in ME/CFS.
Some more suggestive evidence for a head or neck injury/misalignment connection to ME/CFS and fibromyalgia comes from observations on physical trauma: these disease are known to sometime arises after a physical trauma such as a car crash, especially if the neck is involved.
This study for example mentions that soft tissue trauma to the neck can result in an increased incidence of fibromyalgia; and
this study found that
fibromyalgia was 13 times more frequent following neck injury than following lower extremity injury.
Ultimately here's no solid proof that jaw, atlas or neck misalignment play any causal role in ME/CFS and fibromyalgia, but there are enough anecdotes and evidence to suggest that such misalignment might conceivably be involved, and so patients who decide to explore this area by means of TMJ, atlas profilax or similar therapies may well find benefits.
Since participating in this thread, it has certainly made me curious about trying such therapies.