Digestive-Organ Dysfunction

“Well, Dr. Jaudy, what has my liver got to do with my brain?” All right. What does your brain have to do with you living? Something like that. So you have to be very, very careful with the stuff. We’re going to focus on two words: Preganglionic and Postganglionic. When it leaves the brain, to the organ. From the organ to the brain. This is your of autonomic nervous system. What does that mean? Autonomic nervous system: this means you’re on autopilot. This is the system, that when you eat now, you don’t tell your liver, hey liver, what’s going on down there? Digest for me. Hey stomach, do this, I want you to digest the turkey sandwich and leave the vegetables until six o’clock. You can’t do that. You eat and this guy is on. It’s on autopilot. If there is any dysfunction in this autonomic nervous system, welcome to the world of digestive disorders. Everybody understand that? Who doesn’t? Okay, good.

We’re going to make it simple. These are wires. This is the brain. Part of the brain, the brain stem. Spinal cord and it’ s wired to the organs. Organ gives a signal to the brain, brain gives a signal to the organ. Let’s take a look at the liver. So the synapse leaves here, goes all the way down, and from the liver goes all the way up, and then the liver says, hey, brain, I need more biochemical reactions. Can you help me? Brain says, okay, I’m on. I’m on the wave. It fires now. If that connection is lost, liver is congested. The world needs to understand this.

Functionally, it’s not that you go do a liver cleanse. If you do a liver cleanse, and this guy is not getting the connection, what have you done? You have cleansed a dysfunctional organ. You need to understand this. It’s important because I had a patient. They told him you need to clean your liver so they put him on lemon juice and oil and and salt and all this stuff. The guy did the liver cleanse and he erupted. in liver patches. Misfiring. What’s happening here?

A preganglionic failure, remember these two words, preganglionic, postganglionic, a preganglionic failure occurs when the impulse generated fails to leave the brain to reach the organ. That is important, profound. Preganglionic. My brain is not firing to my organ. it’s not firing into the booster station, and the booster station is not able to read the signal. A postganglionic failure occurs when the impulse fails to arrive at the brain from the organ. So there is a two way street. Complex stuff, isn’t it? But beautiful. If it’s working right, you are, you enjoy life.

Welcome back after the break, and prior to the break we want to touch base on a very, very important slide that’s called visceral referral pain. Visceral means organs. Referral means it goes to a different site. Pain is pain. Everybody is familiar with pain. Some patients come, most people, or maybe you, something is wrong, and you say, “Dr. Jaudy, I hurt here, I hurt there, and all this area hurts. I have seen doctors, I have done injections, I’ve done deep tissue, whatever it is. They just dug into me and I’m getting worse. What’s going on?” Listen to this. Not all pains are joint pains or muscle pains. Some pains could be coming from your organs, but you don’t feel it in your organ, because your organ cannot tell you, I ache, because there is no pain perception or connection between your organ and your brain, but your organ refers pain to different sites. Could be here, could be there, could be knee, could be sinuses.

How many of you have sinus congestion? Did you know, this is important, that if your lymphatic system, you know the lymph that drains your toxins, or if your liver is clogged, or if you have decreased circulation, you are toxic here, sinuses. How many thousands and thousands of people a year, they do sinus surgery. That guy I told you about, 65 symptoms, all started with a sinus surgery.

Heart. Maybe most of you know, maybe some of you know, that the heart refers pain to the shoulder, here and to here. Right, and that’s how people know, what’s going on, I’m dying. Could be the heart, could be something else, but we never know, but they could refer to the shoulder, but we don’t know before we test and do an examination. Now we’re not going to talk about each one of those, but let’s take the most common.

Kidneys, for example. How many people or some people among you, will say, “Dr. Jaudy. I have pain here. It’s not going away. I did injections, I took medications, I did… They just did, whatever, myofacial release. They went into my abdomen and the pain is there.” It is coming, maybe, from your organs. We need to check the connections, the wiring system. Is this making sense to you guys? Very good.


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