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FASCIA RESEARCH: THE TEMPOROPARIETAL FASCIA

6/27/2018

2 Comments

 

MORE RESEARCH ON FASCIA
THE TEMPOROPARIETAL FASCIA

Fascia Research
Ractapopulous - Pixabay
StatPearls describes itself as providing "peer-reviewed and PubMed-indexed review articles" created for the express purpose of helping healthcare professionals "identify knowledge deficits and quickly review to acquire or refresh medical knowledge.... to provide health professionals with the educational tools needed to identify weaknesses and stay current."  They have articles on almost any topic you can imagine and you can sign up to get information on topics you are interested in in your inbox on a daily basis.  One of the recent articles I received was called Anatomy, Head, Fascia, Temporoparietal, and if you are one of the millions who suffer with CHRONIC NECK PAIN, HEADACHES (MIGRAINES included), or SKULL PAIN / FACE PAIN, this information will be right up your alley.

The authors, Dr.
Carl Shermetaro, an EENT, and Dr. Colin Bohr, a plastic surgeon (both practice at McLaren Oakland Hospital in the Detroit area) kicked things off by talking about the temporoparietal fascia (the FASCIA that is associated with the temporalis muscle, which is housed in the cupped, bony region of the temple --- the area of the head just in front of the ears --- see pictures below).  They say of this fascia.......

"
It is continuous with thesuperficial musculoaponeurotic system that is inferior to the zygomatic arch. These 2 structures are continuous with the platysma muscle in the neck creating a unified fascia layer from the scalp to clavicle. The temporoparietal fascia joins the orbicularis oculi and frontalis muscles anteriorly and the occipitalis muscle posteriorly."

The fascia on your skull (from the frontalis muscle in your forehead to the occipitalis at the base of the rear of the skull) attaches to the round muscles surrounding your eyes, which attaches to the fascia on and around your cheek bones (as you'll notice in a moment, the temporalis tendon runs underneath the zygomatic arch / cheekbone), which attaches to the 'shaver's muscle" (THE PLATYSMA), which is anchored to your collar bones.   Think for a moment about the implications not only for the people struggling with the problems mentioned in the first paragraph, but especially for those whose lives have been turned upside down by WHIPLASH INJURIES. 

The authors go on to describe two layers of fascia (the
temporoparietal fascia and the deep temporal fascia) that are separated by "a loose areolar and avascular layer... referred to as the innominate fascia."  This layer allows people to put their hands on their head and move them around, feeling the more superficial tissue move over the skull and deep fascia (sort of like THIS).  When these tissue layers become adhesed or "TETHERED" together, it not only becomes restricted (HERE), but has the potential to make the sounds --- sounds that many of my patients have described as CRINKLING OR RUSTLING LEAVES --- an almost crunchy sort of thing that reminds them of wadding up a piece of paper.  These adhesions not only cause pain in and of themselves, but can ENTRAP CUTANEOUS NERVES.
parietal fascia
temporoparietal fascia
Because this fascia crosses so many structures, it not only causes some of the problems mentioned earlier, it can affect (or be affected by) the SCM MUSCLE or sternocleidomastoid (I sometimes refer to it as the "WHIPLASH MUSCLE").  There are a number of good YouTube videos on problems associated with the temporalis muscle, and you may want to take a look at some of our TESTIMONIAL VIDEOS on the subject as well.  For many of you, simply MANAGING YOUR LEVELS OF SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATION will prove helpful since inflammation always causes fibrosis / scar tissue (HERE).  And if you like our site, be sure and show us some love on FACEBOOK.
2 Comments

HEADACHES, SKULL PAIN, HEAD PAIN, AND FACE PAIN:  IS IT ALL THE SAME?

12/14/2014

1 Comment

 

THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHRONIC
HEADACHES,SKULL PAIN, AND FACE PAIN

IS IT ALL THE SAME THING?

Skull Pain
Wellcome Trust # L0023747
"Headache and facial pain are common complaints in the emergency and outpatient setting."  From an article written by a group of seven prominent physicians for Emedicine (Facial Pain and Headache).

"Headaches and facial pain are common in the general population."  From Temporomandibular Disorders, Facial Pain, and Headaches in the April, 2014 issue of Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain

"Headache and facial pain are common complaints otolaryngologist evaluate in practice."  From a January 27, 2014  "Grand Rounds" presentation at the University of Texas Medical Branch Department of Otolaryngology (Headache and Facial Pain) by Drs. Sharon Ramos and Farrah Siddiqui

"Headache has been described as the most common medical complaint known to man.  A host of facial pain disorders can present to the chronic pain management clinic.  The most frequently presenting conditions are temporomandibular disorder (TMD), TGN, post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN), and persistent idiopathic facial pain.  Persistent idiopathic facial pain (PIFP), formerly known as atypical facial pain (AFP), is a persistent pain that does not have the characteristics of the cranial neuralgias, and is not attributed to another disorder.  The majority of patients presenting with headache and chronic facial pain have a normal neurological examination.  There is a strong association with functional disorders such as irritable bowel syndrome and psychological distress.   Pain may be initiated by surgery or trauma to the face, teeth, or gums. It is present daily for all or most of the day, without any identifiable local cause. The pain is often described as a continuous dull ache with intermittent severe episodes, affecting any area of the face...."  Excerpted from a 2008 issue of the British Journal of Anaesthesia (Headache and Chronic Facial Pain).

"Pain-associated psychological and psychosocial findings are the rule in patients with persistent orofacial pain. Unspecific adverse health effects were shown to rise proportionally with increasing pain distribution."  From a 2014 issue of The Journal of Craniomandibular Function (Unspecific Adverse Health Effects in Patients with Orofacial Pain)

"Head injury frequently results in headache and at times facial pain. Controversy concerns the relationship of injury in the head and neck area to chronic headache, particularly when no apparent structural traumatic lesion is demonstrable. Neuropathological studies suggest with concussion there is neuronal injury without gross pathology. Closed head injury of seemingly minor degrees may lead to chronic symptoms, often stereotypic, similar to those following concussion, and they have been described by the term post head trauma syndrome or postconcussional syndrome."   From the December 1989 issue of Otolaryngolical Clinics of North America (Headache and Facial Pain Associated with Head Injury).

"Scalp pain is a common symptom of head injury, headaches, and skin conditions. It may result from trauma to the head region, including the brain, skull or scalp. It can occur in conditions that cause headaches or skin irritation, or in more generalized conditions, such as cancer.  Trauma to the head is a common cause of scalp pain. It includes brain injury, skull fracture, or concussion, all of which may occur immediately after the traumatic episode or up to several hours or days afterward. A brain contusion (bruising) from trauma may also result in scalp pain and may indicate bleeding or swelling inside the skull.  Headaches can lead to scalp pain and to pain in any area of the face, neck or head. Several types of headaches may cause scalp pain, such as migraine, sinus headache, tension headache, and those caused by nerve involvement such as occipital neuralgia."  From an article on HealthGrades called Scalp Pain.


"Headache and pain in the face are two difficult problems with which the practitioner of medicine must reckon. Unusual and irregular facial pain seems almost more of a therapeutic chore than the more familiar distress of headache."  Drs. Thomas McElin and Bayard Horton from a November 1947 article found in the Annals of Medicine (Atypical Face Pain: A Statistical Consideration of 66 Cases).


Facial PainAnnemarie Busschers
Whether it's on my DESTROY CHRONIC PAIN site over at WordPress, or on this site, I get lots and lots of inquiries concerning pain that occurs from the shoulders up (HEADACHES, NECK PAIN, SKULL PAIN, and FACE PAIN).  Like painful situations in other areas, many of the problems seen in this region are caused by SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATION.  However, today we are going to discuss some of the mechanical issues that can lead to pain of the head, face, skull, and neck. 

If you click on the links in the brackets above, or take a look at some of our hundreds of VIDEO TESTIMONIALS, you'll begin to realize that CHRONIC PAIN has about a million and one different causes. This past Friday I saw an older female patient who has cleared up 70% of the pain from her Rheumatoid Arthritis since I saw her last (three weeks ago) just by going GLUTEN FREE.  But when it comes to pain of a mechanical origin, by far one of the most common causes is CAR WRECKS / WHIPLASH.  However, if you can dream it up, I've probably seen it (I once successfully treated an individual who had caused Scar Tissue formation in his neck when chains on the engine hoist he had mounted in a tree in his front yard slipped from around his ankles and gave way, allowing him fall about 10 feet to the ground onto his head.)

Although the brain and nerves can certainly be a common factor in problems like these, so can Fascia.  FASCIA is the clear, cellophane-like membrane that covers all the tissues in your body (HERE).  It also has NERVOUS SYSTEM-LIKE properties.  Not only that, but due to TRAUMA, POSTURAL ABNORMALITIES, or REPETITIVE ACTIONS, people can develop ADHESIONS / SCAR TISSUE in their Fascia.  The problem is that not only does Fascia not image well (HERE), it can be over 1,000 times more pain-sensitive than normal tissue (HERE).  I want you to notice something else as well.

If you look at the picture below on the right, you'll notice that all of the muscles from the neck and upper back anchor in and attach to a ridge on the occipital bone that runs from the middle of one ear to the middle of the other (the bony point in the middle is called the External Occipital Protuberance).  Because of Wolff's Law (bone grows in response to mechanical stresses placed upon it, whether normal or abnormal), people sometimes develop a large spur at the EOP or they develop tiny calcifications all along the occipital ridge.


Head Pain
Welcome Trust # L0023739
Skull Pain
Wellcome Trust # L0023740
So; back to the question asked in the title of this post, "Are all these problems essentially the same thing?"  In many cases, yes.  The thing I want you to notice when you look at a skull is just how much Fascia there is covering it.  This Fascia actually has a proper name --- the Galena Aponeurotica aka the Galena Aponeurosis (HERE is a post on it as it relates to Face Pain).  Just behind the auditory opening (ear hole) in the picture below right, you will notice an arrow.  Take a look at where that arrow is pointing.  It is aimed at the origin or upper attachment of the SCM MUSCLE. 

The SCM or Stermocleidomastoid Muscle is one of the chief muscles injured anytime you injure your neck, no matter how you injure your neck.  When the SCM becomes SHORTENED due to SCAR TISSUE, FASCIAL ADHESIONS, or MUSCLE SPASMS, not only will it pull on the neck itself (drawing it into FORWARD HEAD POSTURE), it will also pull on the skull's fascial covering.  This can and does lead to "Skull Pain", which is different than a Headache (HERE).  And as crazy as it sounds, on occasion, the opposite can occur, where the pulling actually originates in the head.

One thing I have noticed with several patients is that these people will complain that they can actually hear the restricted Skull Fascia "crinkle" (rustling leaves is the way I hear it described most frequently) when they move in certain ways.  One of the most amazing cases of this phenomenon was PAM whom I saw for a "tune up" on Friday.   Virtually every patient I've ever seen with this complaint has been put on psyche drugs and ANTI-DEPRESSION MEDICATIONS because doctors have no idea what else to do.

Pain in the Face
Both images by Patrick J. Lynch, medical illustrator
Facial Pain
Because of the fact that the neck muscles, upper back muscles, Skull Fascia, and Cervical Fascia, connect in some form or fashion to the face, the potential for Face Pain increases with them.  Bear in mind that I am not speaking of pain such as that from problems like Trigeminal Neuraliga (Tic Delroux) or even TMJ / TMD, which is another problem altogether.  The kind of Face Pain that people get from Fascial Adhesions, while potentially being quite severe, is usually different.  Lest you deem Face Pain an insignificant problem, understand that it is more common than was previously believed.  Here are some proofs for this.

  • The December 2009 issue of the medical journal Pain carried a study called "Incidence of Facial Pain in the General Population".  The abstract stated that, "Facial pain has a considerable impact on quality of life. Accurate incidence estimates in the general population are scant.  The overall IR was 38.7. It was more common among women compared to men.  From this we can conclude that facial pain is relatively rare, although more common than estimated previously based on hospital data."  An IR of 38.7 means that 1 in every 2,583 persons is dealing with some sort of Chronic Severe Face Pain. The numbers go up from here.
 
  • Dr. Crispian Scully's 2008 book, Oral and Maxillofacial Medicine:  The Basis of Diagnosis and Treatment, said that people with AFP (Atypical Face Pain) could make up as much as 2% of the population (that would be in the neighborhood of 7.5 million people).  Remember that AFP is now referred to as Persistent Idiopathic Facial Pain (PIFP).
 
  • When it comes to AUTOIMMUNITY or CHRONIC INFLAMMATORY ILLNESSES, women take it on the chin.  The Summary Health Statistics for U.S. Adults: National Health Interview Survey, 2009 Department of Health and Human Services Report said that women were more than twice as likely to experience pain  (migraines, neck pain, face jaw pain) than men. Women were twice as likely to experience migraines or severe headaches, or pain in the face or jaw, than men.
 
  • When responding to a CDC / NIH survey of health statistics (Health, United States, 2006:  Chartbook on Trends in the Health of Americans People), it was revealed that low back pain was the most common reason for Chronic Pain (27%).  Severe headache / migraine pain came in tied for second with neck pain at 15% each.  However, the stat that shocked me most was the fact that according to the official government statistics on the subject, a whopping 4% of the population (12,000,000 Americans) claimed to deal with some sort of Face Pain. 

Do I have all the answers?  Heck no.  No one has all the answers.  However, I do know that staying on the same path of tests, drugs, more tests, more drugs, doctor visits, more drugs, specialist visits, and still more drugs, is not getting it done.  If it were, you wouldn't be wasting your time reading this post when you could be doing something fruitful and productive. 

1 Comment

FACE PAIN

3/25/2014

0 Comments

 

FACE PAIN

Picture
Johnny "Comfreak" Linder - Pixabay
"Head, neck and face pain are commonly encountered in the daily practice of therapeutic massage, physiotherapy and indeed medical practice. Muscles as a primary source of pain have long been recognized by massage therapists and sections of the physiotherapy and medical professions. Some of the leading workers in the field of musculoskeletal medicine, such as Vladamir Janda, Janet Travell and David Simon, have constantly brought to our attention through their clinical research the role of muscles and their associated soft tissue investments (fascia) in the etiology of many clinical syndromes.  These syndromes are often poorly managed and sometimes totally misdiagnosed because of the failure of clinicians to recognize and appreciate the significance of muscular dysfunction in the presentation of their patient's signs and symptoms."  Andrew J. Gallagher (Australia) from The Myofascial Component of Facial Pain
If you are not a person affected by Face Pain (in other words, you or someone you know or care about suffers with this problem), you probably don't know much about it.  It's bigger than you could have dreamed.  Depending on whose research you look at, between 100 and 200 million Americans suffer with some kind of CHRONIC PAIN situation.  It's even harder to try and pin down the numbers of people struggling with Chronic Facial Pain, but suffice it to say that somewhere between 5 and 20 million patients are dealing Chronic Severe Face Pain of one type or another.  There are many reasons for Face Pain.  These include.....
  • DENTAL ISSUES:  There are a bunch of these, and include chronic (and often hidden) infections as well as TMJ. 
  • TMJ / TMJD:  Even though I mentioned it above, issues with the TMJ are common and can cause Chronic Facial Pain
  • CHRONIC SINUS INFECTIONS:  To read more, on this issue go HERE.
  • MIGRAINE HEADACHES:  Common.  HERE.
  • TRIGEMINAL NEURALGIA / TIC DELROUX:  Called "Suicide Disease" because of its severity. 
  • OTHER KINDS OF NEURALGIA:  Post Herpetic (SHINGLES) is a common one.  I would try COLD LASER on any form of neuralgia.
  • PSYCHOGENIC:  This is the old "it's-all-in-your-head" approach (HERE).  While this is true in some cases, it is probably overused by doctors who simply don't understand what's going on.
The list above is by no means complete, as there are all sorts of other reasons a person could develop Face Pain.   The problem could be completely neurological such as something that would be seen after a HEAD INJURY (PCS or TBI).  Or it could be related to trauma to the Muscles and Fascia. 

Although FASCIA is the most abundantly found connective tissue in the body, it does not get much play in the medical field as to its potential role in CHRONIC PAIN SYNDROMES.  For many of you struggling with Chronic Pain, this is unfortunate indeed.  Fascia is not only the most abundant connective tissue, it is also the most pain-sensitive as well.  And to make matters worse, because the Fascia in most areas of the body is cellophane-thin, it cannot be imaged with even the most technologically advanced techniques such as MRI.  Add these factors together and people are automatically set up for diagnostic / therapeutic failure.

Over the years I have seen numerous cases of FASCIAL ADHESIONS in the Face.  While smaller, the muscles of the face are not really different than the muscles found in the rest of the body.  Furthermore, the amount of Fascia on the head is astounding (HERE).  Throw in the Cervical Fascia that is so commonly responsible for CHRONIC NECK
PAIN, add to it the fact that the Fascia from all these regions is connected together, and you can see that the potential for disaster is high.  Let me share a few stories with you concerning Chronic Face Pain.  
I once had a patient who had suffered with Chronic Face Pain after going to a dentist to have a tooth pulled.  After several negative MRI's and other tests, this person came to see me.  I used our Scar Tissue Remodeling treatment to find a Fascial Tear that ran from one corner of their mouth, to the bottom of the orbit, just below the eye.  It seems that the dentist (an oral surgeon) had pulled a tooth under anesthesia.  Obviously, the mouth had been forced open too far.  The tear was invisible until I started working on it. 

I have seen several people, including a young woman whose car was moving at over 100 miles per hour at the time of the collision, involved in severe MVA's, where they impacted their face with the windshield, steering wheel, or even the airbag.  Some of these people ended up with Scar Tissue in their orbital socket (the lip of bone around their eyeball).  Some had Scar Tissue on or around their zygomatic arch.  Still others had Scar Tissue and Fascial Tearing in the muscles of mastication (temporalis and masseter).   I have also seen a lot of Facial Scar Tissue due to fights and or SPORTS INJURIES.   The bottom line is that any sort of trauma to the face, has the ability to leave adhesions and Scar Tissue in the Fascia.  The downer for you is that these are the sorts of injuries that doctors will never figure out.
If your Chronic Face Pain is the result of some sort of trauma, there may be a solution.  I recently had good results with a person who shattered their zygomatic arch several years previous to my treating them (you can read about it HERE).  After a steel plate in the face was installed and everything was "healed", this person was still having pain.  The doctors blamed it on all sorts of things, including the fact that they thought that this individual was both crazy and DEPRESSED.  If this sounds like the sort of situation you have been dealing with, it might be of benefit to at least EMAIL ME A HISTORY and let me tell you what I think.  If it looks like something I could help you with, I will tell you (HERE).  If not, I'll tell you that as well.
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    Russell Schierling

    Dr. Schierling completed four years of Kansas State University's five-year Nutrition / Exercise Physiology Program before deciding on a career in Chiropractic.  He graduated from Logan Chiropractic College in 1991, and has run a busy clinic in Mountain View, Missouri ever since.  He and his wife Amy have four children (three daughters and a son).

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