Leaders in Frequency Specific Microcurrent Education

Episode Seventy-One – Progression

Episode Seventy-One – Progression: Audio automatically transcribed by Sonix

Episode Seventy-One – Progression: this mp4 audio file was automatically transcribed by Sonix with the best speech-to-text algorithms. This transcript may contain errors.

Dr. Carol:
One of the questions I want to talk about as soon as Kim gets here is when do you use TTH? Remember that? That's Kevin uses it every day and we run it our computer on our computers occasionally. Oh, I had a kid in as a patient this week who had encephalitis. No, I'm still having trouble. Who had encephalitis when he was an infant. And. It's not that he had a whole lot of bad things happen, which is what we call the tendency to have bad things happen. And people always wonder, when do you run it? On this child his symptom for two years has been constant nausea. You got a viral infection. And ever since the virus, he's been nauseated, especially at night. And he has bad dreams. And he has dreams about spiders. And it's nobody's been able to help him. And when his mom and I started talking about his medical condition, he plugged his fingers and put his head down in between his knees. And for a ten-year-old, that's as bright as his kid. Just didn't feel right.

Dr. Carol:
So I ran frequencies for virus in the small intestine. What you can't see are the text messages that Kim is sending as she's trying to overcome the difficulties with their computer. Anyway, I ran virus in the small intestine. Obviously I run virus, I run concussion and Vagus. But I also ran the virus. All the stomach virus frequencies in the Vagus, all the stomach virus frequencies in the small bowel. And one of the ultrasounds that he had medically, that hurt because of the way the lady pressed on him,. Oh goodie she's here. Was in the appendix. There she is. And the thing I added to that program was TTH. It just didn't feel right. And when somebody has a really high fever or they have encephalitis or they're really, really sick or they're using drugs or they have a history of drug use or whatever. They're out of their body and TTH is for the energetic influences that create negative things that happen So it was an hour and a half. There you are. Yay! I got it. Yay!

Kim Pittis:
I'm so sorry.

Dr. Carol:
Mercury goes direct tomorrow. If that's any comfort to anybody besides me.

Kim Pittis:
As soon as Kevin I wrote I don't know. I'm always on 20 minutes ahead. I check the speaker, I check the mic, I check the lights, I check the quote. I came and then everything was frozen.

Dr. Carol:
If it's any comfort Merceury goes direct tomorrow, it's the last three weeks. And I finally, when things got bad enough, I finally looked it up. Let me finish the story. Yes. That isn't a case where you would normally think to run, TTH.

Kim Pittis:
Hey, I was trying to catch part of it, so I'll listen and then I'll replay it later.

Dr. Carol:
Yeah. This kid had constant nausea. Worse at night. Worse any time he got upset. And after a viral infection, That was a couple of years ago. But in his history, like, we had to send him out of the room so that his mom could tell me his history because he plugged his ears and put his head down between his knees. Anything that just freaked him out. So that's a good face. So anyway, so I ran a virus in the small bowel concussion and Vagus. He was hyper esthetic, to sharp touch everywhere. So I also ran 40/10, and then I ran manually I ran virus in the Vagus. But I also on a CustomCare put it when somebody has encephalitis, a history of drug use, high fever, a period of time where they're like on life support or whatever is about the energetic influences that feed off of negative events. And this should be a happy, healthy ten-year-old. And he's completely neurotic and in a good family and in a private school and very privileged affluence kind of thing. One treatment. The next day he came in. And so how was last night? He went, Yes. No nausea. For the first time in two years. Wow. So I did it again. Repeated basically the same treatment except for 40/10. And we'll see what he does on Friday. And then we'll cancel his two appointments for next week. And then Mom is totally into this and is taking the Core and buying a CustomCare and all of that.

Kim Pittis:
I was just going to say, So how long would you suspect expect that to last?

Dr. Carol:
I won't know. I'm seeing them Friday because it was first treatment was Monday. Second treatment was Tuesday. I'll see Friday if it lasts a week. Pretty good chance it's permanent. But I want to see him in two weeks just to make sure. If he's perfect, they can call and cancel.

Kim Pittis:
Why would you expect one week could lead to permanency?

Dr. Carol:
Because if it was going to come back, it would come back within a week, I would think. And a ten year old. If you think of FSM as changing cell signaling. And this switching, if you change it and it's changed and it's something as simple in our world as a viral infection that turned off the vagus and messed up his nervous system and his stomach. Why would it come back? I don't know. I don't know either. And if it hadn't if it hadn't been 100% effective that first night. So it might be gradual and we have to keep working on it. Blah, blah, blah. But in an adult, you don't have a single cell in your small intestine that was there seven days ago. And then kids, they turn over faster. So kids are pediatricians are magicians. I don't see many children. I used to when I had a general practice. But if you talk to a pediatrician, kids go bad fast. They go from 0 to 100. But they also recovered. Fast. If you get the right thing, if the diagnosis is correct. That's right. To get better fast. So it's. So it should hold. But that's the other thing. I don't know what your quote of the day is, but mine is flexibility. Weight of mind and flexibility in adjusting your treatments to what you have in front of you.

Kim Pittis:
Yep. That off to the word that I had circled for today was progression. Oh, but very similar because how do we progress as clinicians is you have to be flexible to be a successful FSM practitioner.

Dr. Carol:
To be a successful any practitioner, you have to be not only flexible. I got to. I actually had time to do emails today and this year. Yeah. And I got an email from a practitioner in India that I that contacted me on Messenger, and then he sent an email. He saved up for a year so he could buy a PrecisionCare. And he said that was okay because it gave me time to immerse myself in the Core again, in the podcasts and the books, in the webinars, in all of the training that gives us the way to think about what you can do with FSM. And what I thanked him for was his dedication. Not FSM, but his dedication and devotion to his patients and getting them well.

Kim Pittis:
The quote that you'd asked me to write came so quickly to me because I think we should always kind of check in to what our personal mantra is going to be, what our professional mantra is going to be. Because as you evolve, it changes, Like when you graduate college, it's just to get out of debt.

Dr. Carol:
And get a job.

Kim Pittis:
Get A job and start paying off a student loan, right? That was my goal for the first ten years To not just get a job, but to keep the job and to keep the practice and to you're in like survival mode.

Dr. Carol:
Right.

Kim Pittis:
Then you get to that point in your career where you're really enjoying what you're doing, and hopefully that comes with learning and getting new tools. And when I was reading what you had written, I just thought it was selfless of you to write that because you could have written so many things about yourself and what you do, but it's just a true testament to what the vision is. And so for me to read yours and I was like, Yeah, and I felt like a little like little side sidecar sidekick. I'm going to do the same.

Dr. Carol:
The hardest thing for me to deal with, honestly, was having fans. And having people make FSM about me and it's totally not. And I have an ego. I keep it in a shoebox in the closet with a weight on top of it. But it's FSM is about what the frequencies do. I'm just the coaxial cable that brought it from there to there and just kept practicing with it. The most important thing about FSM is what the practitioners do with it. This year, for the first time, I'm about to lose my mind because the case reports at the symposium. I had to cut them from 30 minutes to 20 minutes so we could do three in an hour. On video, one from Poland and one from Colorado. And they're going to be shown in the ballroom at lunchtime for people that don't want to do tai chi or sit by the pool. And it's that is the most amazing thing. After 20 years of having to drag people out of the bushes to do video case reports. And the case reports are acute burns and radiation scar tissue in the prostate. And a DVT healed in 24 hours. Remember the part where I said we don't treat DVT, DVT? This particular practitioner, God bless her, ignored that and fixed this huge DVT in 24 hours. and kept data on it. And it was, anyway it's getting there because eventually FSM Like could have a whole weekend that's just case reports and we're going to put on the website, videotapes. So somebody has a case report, they make ten slides, they do 20 minutes on video, and we create a video library, that's not me, it's them and organize it by subject matter.

Kim Pittis:
Yeah, that's a great idea. It is a continual continuum of learning and sharing and progressing not only what we do as clinicians, but what the frequencies are doing and thinking about them in different ways. For instance, I've been using bleeding, 18 more in the last six months than I've used my entire career with FSM.

Dr. Carol:
What do you use it for?

Kim Pittis:
Any time something is scarred, I do a drive-by on 18 first and I never used to Doing it first now because it just seems like the logical thing to do if something is in a scarred or adhered state. Aside from the fact if it happened due to immobility, but if that muscle or connective tissue or whatever it has scarred, I have to think at one point it was torn and broken first. And if it was torn and broken, I have to think at one point it bled.

Dr. Carol:
That makes perfect sense.

Kim Pittis:
That is my reverse engineering of that. And the only time I don't go there, like I said, if something is adhered because it just hasn't moved for so long. So sometimes we see that in the subscap where it hasn't moved, the guy has been frozen, big bunny ears, air quotes. The GAH hasn't moved. So there's no upward rotation of the scapula and the rib cage. So it sticks, not necessarily bled, but at the same time, if you're doing manual therapy and you are releasing that tissue and you are a little bit too aggressive with it, you are also causing some tearing and some bleeding because if you've ever bruised a patient. They bled, So. I'm eating my words here because maybe we always need to be using 18

Dr. Carol:
Any time I treat scar tissue I always finish with stopping bleeding because anything scarred is vascularized. And when you take apart scar tissue, pretty good chance you're going to tug on a capillary someplace. And yeah, so that's one.

Kim Pittis:
It's funny, I had a patient today or this week and we ran out of machines and they had a CustomCare. It was one of those patients where I used all mine and I'm like, Ooh, if only I had one more machine and I have one in my backpack. I brought mine. I'm like, Perfect. So I just was going through. It was a time thing and I was going through what she had on there that I could use in that moment. And I needed something like an acute soft tissue workout recovery, something to, I think of it as a vacuum cleaner coming to pick up the debris that I'm about to create really fast. Because I had found something really deep. I needed to release it, but I didn't have time to do it the way I wanted to, so I had to be a little bit more aggressive. And she's what are you using this for right now? Explain to me your thought process. And I said, If you've ever been to the dentist and you're filling or you're getting some work done and they're drilling, they put the spit sucker in there to clean up the debris, this is your spit sucker. And she's, Oh, I get it. And I said, We just don't have time to run it after, so we're going to run it at the same time. So my hope is that as we're breaking things apart, this other machine is just going to clean it up so we don't have to worry about soreness or bruising or anything like that afterwards.

Dr. Carol:
Speaking of, that's brilliant. Speaking of multiple machines, my sister is here and she's got some thoracic discs that are giving her fits. She's had them for years, but they really let up because of something she did about two weeks ago. And I was explaining to her, it's the pain pathways from those disks or sensitized because you've had them since 1926, 2020, 2001. And she said, What sensitized? Oh. Okay. So I went into the Core to that slide that says, what do I why do I scratch when I itch? It's the pain pathways aren't as simple as you think it is. How is it that you scratch?

Dr. Carol:
She's not medically trained except for hanging out with me for 20 years. And so there's this nerve and this goes to the spinal cord and its ascending pain pathways, and it goes through the medulla, it goes to the thalamus. The thalamus decides whether it's emotionally issue. And then your sensory cortex says, Yeah, this is where it hurts right there. But there are two places. In the brain between the midbrain and the medulla that are connected to descending inhibitory pathways. So she was asking me, Why can't I tell people that I'm in pain? Why can't I talk about it? Because I said this flares up every six months.

Dr. Carol:
No, not like this. No, really. You tell me about this thing. These thoracic discs twice a year. Oh, it's just something that. It's something to talk about. So, yeah, but you watch two movies a day while you're doing your paperwork on your computer. You have a movie running. Tell me about the movies. Don't talk about your pain. Why wouldn't I talk about my pain? And as I was describing it, it's like the pain pathways as something as this chronic gets sensitized, they go from a goat path to a four lane freeway up saying, this hurts, but you have two parts of your brain. Three parts, actually. There's one part of your brain that makes morphine. And the aqueduct upgrade has descending inhibitory pathways that hit the dorsal root ganglion right where, let's say you're knee. Let's make it simple. You have arthritis in your knee. Right where the knee is sending a message to your spinal cord saying, Hey, my knee hurts, your dog runs out into the street, there's a car coming, and all of a sudden you can run on that sore knee.

Dr. Carol:
Why is that? It's because the periaqueductal, the Gray said, I win. It instantly sends a message down that decreases the pain. This is why we run 40/89 to decrease the sensitization and increase descending inhibition. And the complexity of it. I finish this conversation with her and said, I have got to, I don't know, close the clinic and go get a PhD in real science because I. But just that. And I said so somebody comes in with arthritis in their knee and you only have one machine, you can only treat their knee. But I never use one machine on somebody with knee pain ever. You have one machine running from the low back to the knee to treat the nerve. And you just look at this diagram. You have one machine running and on 40/10. And in a perfect world, you have one running on concussion and vegus. And depending on their history and how they talk about how much their knee hurts, you might need one machine that runs 40/89 for 60 minutes. And that's four. She said, what if you don't have four? I said, you're kind of screwed. Oops. I did warn somebody that when you're 76, that filter just explodes.

Kim Pittis:
I don't know that you're screwed. I just think it will take a lot longer.

Dr. Carol:
Takes a lot longer because you have to do it in separate visits. And the problem is with spinal cord sensitization. Between this week, especially if you're seeing a week apart. If you're seeing them five days in a row, it's not a problem. Seeing them week apart, by the time you get to the next week, you're back where you started.

Kim Pittis:
Yeah, it's funny. It's been the week of the knee. Like, there's been so many knees that have been coming in this week. Last week. In California, I seem to see a knee, and ankle increase around this time. We have a big half marathon that comes up in March. All the people are starting their New Year's resolutions. So everybody's running bike riding and doing all the things. And I used to think knee pain due to like cartilaginous issues or just wear and tear. You're making a funny face right now because you're reading. You're not listening to me. It's not me that's.

Dr. Carol:
Making marathon bicycling.

Kim Pittis:
No, I was saying years ago I used to think wear and tear on knee. So meniscus, patella, femoral syndrome, that would be one machine. Super easy. But it's not like you said. You have to treat the nerve with one machine because the patient's pain has to go down that visit regardless if you're treating anything else.

Dr. Carol:
Yeah.

Kim Pittis:
And the patient's pain going down isn't always as simple as 40/396 or 13/396. There could be a 40/89 component. There could be a concussion protocol that you need to run, especially with an athlete that is stressed out about the fact that they're not moving. Their vagus nerve is going to need to be treated because if they're an athlete and they're not moving, that spells trouble for everything and their sympathetic nervous system. So right there's four machines, and I haven't even treated the knee yet.

Dr. Carol:
Yeah, and that's you can do it with four people that are freaking out about now, $24,000 worth of equipment. You can do all but one of it with CustomCare's. Run 396 on one of them. 40/10. 40/89, concussion and Vagus. That's four CustomCare's in a PrecisionCare to play with the knee and find out what you need. No, it's totally fun.

Kim Pittis:
And I have to say I remember that part of the Core where you're saying you can't put tissue back that's not there. So if someone's cartilage in their knee is gone, I just want to reiterate to these practitioners that get these patients, that doesn't mean you walk them out of your clinic. There is still so much you can do with neural patterning, the health of their quadriceps, the pain. Just because you're not regrowing cartilage doesn't mean your job is over with.

Dr. Carol:
And coordinating movement. And there was that case report from David Murphy where you took he showed an MRI or an x ray cartilage that thick. Two millimeters. And then six months later, cartilage, five millimeters. Same views, same radiologist, same knee. It's okay. And then I have an MRI that shows a thin, desiccated L5 S1 disk and five years later, another MRI on the same patient. Doing exercises and running FSM. And the disc was white and fluffy and completely normal.

Kim Pittis:
So maybe we can change the narrative a little bit because.

Dr. Carol:
A little bit.

Kim Pittis:
Yeah. So many cases, case reports that I have done that I've heard that deal with when we're treating the joint structure itself. Once that box is checked, where even though you're not fixing it. Once the frequencies have targeted the area, it seems like everything else biomechanically can just work better. And if you're a biomechanics geek like myself, I wouldn't dare to try to put somebody through an exercise pattern when I know they are compensating because of a joint pathology, whether it's in the spine or in an extremity. And I'll try to tell them like your knees not fixed, your ankles not fixed, but we're just getting a better foundation to incorporate these exercises so that all your movements are going to be cleaner. And I think once you describe that to somebody, they get it. That is why I thought about the word progression is because no matter where you are in rehab, whether you're in that 20 minute post-op phase, which is my super exciting one when they're still asleep and I'm so lapping at CustomCare on them. Or with my daughter, who's nine and a half months post ACL rehab. And it's the most frustrating part of it because it's like losing the last two pounds. You don't have pain, you've got strength. But now we're fine tuning everything. All the little proprioceptive moves, the quickness, the speed, the agility, the torque. You're not done because the nervous system still is not convinced that this knee that has a brand new ACL graft is ready for that.

Dr. Carol:
And I have to go back to. It's not as simple as you think.

Kim Pittis:
Yes.

Dr. Carol:
The cerebellum is a dictator. It does not notify and it does not negotiate. So the first thing I treat with any joint, every joint, is scarring on the nerve. It doesn't matter what you do to the joint. If I'm working on somebodies knee and the first thing I do, towel on the low back, towel around the knee. The first thing I do is work on the scar tissue and the frontal plexus and the sciatic. And that web of nerves that surround the knee and sometimes even the posterior and anterior tibial nerves in the lower leg. I do that before I treat the joint. And it's scarring. It's not inflammation. Scarring because the cerebellum won't let you move a joint or use correct mechanics. The nerve is adhered, the progression. It's a good word progression in my world. Because I'm neurocentric is scarring in the nerve. Then you treat the joint with one machine inflammation in the nerve from the low back to the. Let's pretend. Stay with the knee. But sensitization in the cord, sensitization in the brain and concussion and vagus. You do it all at the same time. Or you can do a drive-by if that's all the time you have. But. When you're rehabbing someone and you're you move to the exercise phase.

Dr. Carol:
The motion will never be normal as long as the cerebellum thinks that there is a nerve at risk. Even if it's just a little slip of the nerve that's up near the pectineus. It's pelvic motion for the chiropractors and PTs listening. It's pelvic tork. So we were talking last night about adjusting some of these sacroiliac joints and whether you put them on blocks or do mobilization or even if you're an osteopath and you do that, if the ureter is scarred to the psoas, you do anything you want. And yes, the pelvis will talk for ten, 20 minutes. They get out of the office and then they're. Then it's done. You treat scarring in the ureter. The only way to get the pelvis to work is to get the psoas to relax. And the only way to get the psoas to relax is to treat scarring in the corridor. And once you do that. Then you treat scarring in those branches of nerves that come down under the pelvis. And then 81/84, and then you tell the cerebellum to 40/84 to forget everything it thought it knew about. How the pelvis should behave.

Dr. Carol:
And then you increase secretions in the Then you can position the pelvis or move the pelvis in such a way that it's biomechanically normal. But for me, because the way I think about it, that has to be the progression. Does that make sense?

Kim Pittis:
It totally makes sense. And it goes back to what I was saying about bleeding before when something is scarred because and in this case, maybe you don't need the bleeding so much because the scarring that happens is due to especially in a case where we're talking, okay, we're talking about the knee or even with my daughter, who's quite far out of her post-op 9.5 months. There's scarring in those abductors or scarring in the hamstrings because her range of motion has not been trained. She's only now getting back to 100% of everything. Things had nine months to stick together. So to your point, the nervous system is, whoa, this is super vulnerable still. So I get it. The graft may look hot, but everything else looks sticky.

Dr. Carol:
And ask yourself about the original injury. Is there any way to tear the ACL without. Doing something that stretches, injures, bruises, everything else on that leg? The ACL is the thing we pay attention to because that's the thing the surgeon can fix and you can try. But there's no way to have that kind of injury and not have. Collateral damage is a good word.

Kim Pittis:
Yes. No pun intended.

Dr. Carol:
Yeah. We've got to answer Matt's question.

Kim Pittis:
We do. So you go ahead and you can read it. Or I can read it.

Dr. Carol:
Oh, no, seriously.

Kim Pittis:
You have to tell the people who are listening what the question is.

Dr. Carol:
Okay. I'm treating a family member. 23-year-old female, got a spiral fracture of the fibula in 2013. Developed CRPS. Pain spread to the right leg by 15. Oops. Had a car accident in '18 already there's ditch in there someplace. So the pain was whole body. So 40/10. That was the auto accident. Ongoing headaches. Ligamentous injury. So that's a supine cervical practicum. So Pamela's whole body, that's 40/10. Ongoing headaches. That's the Sub-occipitals and one cervical practicum with a lot of attention paid to 124/100. Hypermobile all over. So on top of everything else, she has Ehlers-Danlos or some version of it. So neck two feet, 124/77 and has undiagnosed POTS which is also Ehlers-Danlos, and concussion and Vagus. Treated last night. Starting pain was a four. Concussion 40/10. Yay. I'm so proud. Chronic fracture on the left leg. That might have been a 40/562, 40/89 for 25 minutes. Pain went down for 2 hours. No pain in the legs. The next morning, she felt exhausted and emotional. That's the Ehlers-Danlos and the Vagus and her thalamus midbrain, trying to figure out who she is. Upper back pain wrapped around the trunk. Hard to breathe fully. So I'm hoping that you did a sensory exam to find out why. Pain felt more sharp and prickly. Radiating, burning sensation. That's nerve. But it sounds like. Sounds like the CRPS was in her legs. And the fiber was full-bodied. That's 40/10. Do a sensory exam around the trunk. Hard to breathe fully usually means that the nerves You probably changed your posture completely, and something in the thoracic spine won't expand. And the only thing I can think of is nerve pain. So you run, towel on the back, towel on the front 40/396 and the CRPS was in her legs. But it.

Kim Pittis:
I might add, with that thoracic pattern Vagus and the diaphragm are having a fit inside, and sometimes treating diaphragm for scarring can help with the Vagus, which is going to be a bit of a chasing your tail with everything else that's going on but.

Dr. Carol:
But I always say nerves on the chest won't expand yet. If the pain and pain went away and the mobility improved every place else. Yeah. And then the thoracic nerves are what's left especially sharp and prickly.

Kim Pittis:
Instead of she ran 40/396 Are you thinking of 49 or 81, 396 or 13?

Dr. Carol:
I'll just she ran 40/396 down the leg.

Kim Pittis:
That was just not like, okay.

Dr. Carol:
Yeah, I think that's what I would do because she had the CRSP in the leg, so that's great. It was 40/396 and the low back to the legs. Customcare's One more day with her before you fly home. Planning on the legs. So put a towel along her spine and a towel on the front. Run 40/396 and till the prickly pain and the chest goes away and it's 13. It's scarring in the thoracic nerves. And then have her start taking.

Kim Pittis:
Say yet mobilize it with breath.

Dr. Carol:
Immobilize it with breath. And the reason I know this works is I had open heart surgery, right? And these nerves on the left-hand side were scarred. And we had to in order to get my thoracic motion back. I think it was my C spine. We had to treat scarring in the thoracic. So the thoracic motion was normal so that we could try and prevent my C spine surgery. So that's what I would do. I hope it works. I'd say 40/89 for at least 30 minutes and 40/10 if you have enough machines to do 40/10 again. But 40/10, one on 40/89 for 30 minutes and then run concussion in the vegus, I think it runs 47 minutes. So split that other CustomCare between 40/89 and which is just quieting the midbrain for the civilians and 40/396 polarize positive stuff and then 13 the trick in the thoracic spine, the reason you can't take a deep breath is scarring in the thoracic intercostal nerves. That's I've never seen it caused by anything else. Okay. Scarring on the ear comes from. Oh, no, Dana, this is a great question. Where does scarring in the order come from? Oh, yeah.

Kim Pittis:
That is a good question. We talk about treating it all the time.

Dr. Carol:
I know. And the places we've seen it are bladder infections, kidney infections, kidney stones and more common. Is. Falling flat on your back. So I played football. I played soccer. And all you have to do is watch video of soccer games or football games where somebody gets speared at T 12 with a helmet or a head or an elbow or foot. So a blow to the back. Any bruising in the kidney fat pad because the kidneys hardly ever truly injured. But the kidney fat pad gets bleeding and then all it takes is a couple of drops of blood running down that ureter. So as a fascia line and there's fiber sites so it's scarred. And then there you go. Oh, there you go.

Kim Pittis:
Is this the same Dana in the webinar chat that added to the.

Dr. Carol:
Yeah, I fell on my back while pregnant. Mysterious Pain. Two months after the child was born. Stabbing pain to the chest, hard to breathe. Adhesions in the ribs that pointed back to the fall during the pregnancy that was dormant until the pregnancy was over. And just to be a complete geek and a pain. Why was it that you didn't feel the pain until the pregnancy was over? HCG, Human Chorionic Gonadotropin has been approved for the treatment of pain. Yes, Dana, you're right. And the hormones during pregnancy, especially at the end of the pregnancy, make everything really flexible. Because you have to. To that impossible thing. But HCG actually reduces pain. Yep. It was towards the end. Oh, I love it when it makes sense because we make this stuff up and hope that it's the facts. Right?

Kim Pittis:
No, but you're right. Everything is so loose towards the end to make way for what's about to happen. Right. So it only makes sense that. All that trauma too. And also, like when you slip and fall when you're pregnant and something is in this perfect environment for being a hypomobile or hypermobile because of the ligature laxity that's there.

Dr. Carol:
Yeah.

Kim Pittis:
There's that.

Dr. Carol:
Exactly. That's interesting. Oh, Cynthia Advanced six months. So we don't have 36. One sentence. To give to me. I can use it. Work like a charm on a patient Long-covid loss of smell. Yep. It's. No. I have changed the Advanced again. For those of you that have done the Advanced before and I'm focusing on the Channel A Frequencies and Long-covid is those same six viral frequencies we used in acute COVID and they are you just use them to change the signaling in the organs that are affected in long-covid which include the vagus. So concussion and vagus doesn't include any frequencies from the virus. So you create a LC long-covid. Concussion and Vagus. And you put those six virus frequencies for just 2 minutes. I guess you could put them in the middle. I just put them in with the Vagus to get the Vagus re signaling.

Kim Pittis:
Here's one for you. I had a young girl. She had a previous diagnosis of M Cass and now got moved up to Ehlers-Danlos and just had COVID.

Dr. Carol:
Oh, okay.

Kim Pittis:
This is who comes into me now.

Dr. Carol:
You're welcome. And I'm sorry. So the diagnosis is backwards first and those first? Yes. That turns off the vagus, and that causes digestive dysfunction. And that causes M-Cass, right? Yeah. And I just found out I have a new best friend. Not best friend, but I have a new, really good friend. Her name's and Ann Reuters. She's a neurosurgeon in Virginia whose daughter has SIBO. And she told me because she has time to read the literature, I guess instead of anyway, that there are receptors on mast cells for IgG. Antibodies. Okay. So it's not just macrophages. It's not just a story I've been telling, which is the macrophages eat the IgG complexes. They explode and release histamine. Yeah. That, to me, was always the mechanism for M-Cass. Yeah, but she says that IgG antibodies have their receptors on mast cells. That caused them to degranulate and release his to me. Yeah. So the trick is still get the Vegas working. Treat for histamine when. God bless Neil Nathan. Neil Nathan had as a 60-minute presentation, but he wants me to give him 90 minutes so that we can do 30 minutes of how to use FCM to address what his slides are about. And yeah, it's so how to treat M-Cass and I have mixed patients and short term, getting rid of histamine is easy. Long term it's Vagus, it's mold, it's treat the leaky gut It's give them. Oh, come on brain. The stuff that the bacteria in our gut are supposed to make, but they don't. Butyrate. Thank you. Give them butyrate so it heals the gut. Treat the gut for torn and broken. And it's just not that hard. And it's fine to use drugs and antihistamine that is specific for SIBO and specific for M-Cass and it works. And so that's the progression. We live with one foot in each world.

Kim Pittis:
You use the word progression again.

Dr. Carol:
Yeah, I love progression. That's good.

Kim Pittis:
Was there another?

Dr. Carol:
Oh, Stephanie. Quiet with loss of smell after a cold. So 38s/00 etc. in the adenoid sinus and then had adenoid surgery to scrape out the polyps. Same concept along with scarring. That's tricky because the guy that scraped out the polyps forgot that the adenoid sinus is a it's like artificial turf with the turf part being nerve roots. And if you indiscriminately just go up there and scrape all the polyps off. What are you doing to the nerve roots? Okay, fine. And the polyps would have gone away had she FSM back in the day and get rid of the viral signaling that causes the inflammation, that causes the polyps. It's what caused it? It's inflammation. What caused the inflammation? The virus.

Kim Pittis:
And I think that just that really simple sentence you just said, what caused it That has to be on every slide at the Core. Put it on a footnote somewhere because if you can. The earlier you can start thinking how did I get, how did we get here? What caused this?

Dr. Carol:
You know what that is actually, as I rewrite the Advanced, which I haven't started doing it as I rewrite the Advanced, that may be where I start is this do say the Advanced is. It's a way of thinking.

Kim Pittis:
Yes, yes.

Dr. Carol:
And even in the Core, it's all about what caused it. Yeah. And so you have to deal with what is there and you have to deal with what caused it.

Kim Pittis:
Yes.

Dr. Carol:
At the same time if you can.

Kim Pittis:
Enter multiple machines because you do. And I feel like so many times we're just being a hypocrite because I'm like, You have to. How did you get here? You have to treat the cause. Now. You said you have to treat the pain and that's in real-time. Yeah, but you've got five machines, so you can do all that. Yes. That's how I get things done. Because you do have to treat in real time what you are seeing, what they are presenting with. But you have to go forward and back at the same time to think, okay, what's the history? How did we get here? And then where do you need the patient to go? What's going to. Keep the progress, what's going to keep the progression moving in the right direction?

Dr. Carol:
And the word that I keep hearing instead of progression is flexibility. Yes, it's flexibility of mind. It's just Yeah. And sometimes it's painful. Yeah. And there's still the course comes with the little bird. I have no idea why I would think of running on a ten-year-old who has whose only symptom has been nausea, constant nausea. Worse at night. But it's nausea, even on Zofran. For two years in a ten-year-old. They saw a gastroenterologist who said, Here, have some Zofran. I waited a year and a half for this appointment so you could tell me to keep taking Zofran. Thank you very much. And why did I think of TTH? The only reason I thought of TTH was that he was he had a high fever and was effectively out of his body for three days. When you get company, it's like you leave your house with the lights on, the doors open. Who comes in?

Kim Pittis:
Yeah, and I've never thought of it like that. I have to be. I'm new still with all of this. I almost have to be hit over the head with the silver platter to use when it's that person who gives that history that I'm just like, Okay, don't even tell me anymore. Don't want to hear it. But yes, something like that. I would have never gone there. But amazing that you did.

Dr. Carol:
I have the advantage that I was married to George Douglas for 31 years and in the first eight or nine years I was in the healing group every Friday night. And. We've talked about, thought about. I could never see any energetic stuff, but I believe the people who who could. And that concept of energetic influences was so taken for granted in that group that I didn't. It's just it's part of the wallpaper in my brain. And so I think of it probably when other people who haven't had that influence. And now packing up George's house, the piles and boxes of books that never made it onto the bookshelves when he moved into this house. But the piles and boxes of books on theosophy, Alan Watt's, energetic medicine, energetic diet, all of this stuff is a trip down memory lane for me because I stopped having time to go to the healing group in 2000. Probably 2000 when I started traveling a lot and the clinic got insanely busy. I was just too wiped out on Friday night to go. And it was, yeah, it's an interesting concept.

Kim Pittis:
And like you said, you wouldn't have gone there had you not have experienced it. And that's so many, so many things that I think I do well with FSM is because I've witnessed it, I've had to experience it. I've created a hypothesis that really worked and so now I can see it everywhere. So that's the beauty of mileage.

Dr. Carol:
And then once you see it, you can't ever unsee it.

Kim Pittis:
And that can really that can be a love hate. That can be a very paradoxical statement.

Dr. Carol:
We come in, I'm sorry.

Kim Pittis:
That's totally like that one we were arguing about, like my kids and my kids teammates and all the return to play and the potential for injury. And everybody thinks of me is like this negative Nelly, because I'm like, No, it's too soon. This could happen. They're like, Why are you is your brain going there? I'm like, Because that is how we pay the mortgage. Is the patients that are getting hurt doing these things. That is all I see. I not see the potential for danger. I cannot erase the cases of people who came back too fast and were re-injured. That and the unfortunate part.

Dr. Carol:
And then the fact of the matter is that there are a lot of people back sooner than you would prefer. And they don't get hurt and they do this. And the thing is, the only ones we see are the ones where it doesn't go well.

Dr. Carol:
So somebody wants me to have a colonoscopy, right? I've managed to dodge a colonoscopy for now, 26 years. And why is that? I only see the ones that go badly. Oh, it's such a small percentage. If it's 1% and 1%, it's 100% for you. You take out six inches of their colon and I treat their pelvic pain, their abdominal adhesions, their this and their that. And you don't have to deal with it. It's, sorry, here, I'll do the surgery and you wear this bag and then we'll reconnect you and everything will be fine. Everything isnt fine Thank you, Dana. And if your doctor is telling you to do a colonoscopy, what's interesting? I don't want to be anti. But the fact of the matter is that you can do, what do they call the stool test where they test for blood that says that you have colon cancer?

Kim Pittis:
Yes.

Dr. Carol:
You can do that. I'll do that test once a week. It's easy. It's just you do a little thing and you put it in a tube and it's done. When I ask the gastroenterology and gastroenterologist about colonoscopies. The principle of colonoscopies is to prevent cancer. I said I thought it was to discover cancer, he said. All it's to discover polyps that turn into cancer. And then here was here's the game. It wasn't game changer. The game stopped. And I said, okay, what percentage? Where's the study? What percentage of polyps become cancerous? So what's the benefit risk? Cologuard Thank you, Miguel. What's the percentage of polyps that become cancerous? Oh, we can't do that study because it wouldn't be ethical. Excuse me? So you're going to take out a polyp and those are the other ones that treat they take out the polyp, it rips a hole in the colon, the patient gets peritonitis, and then they have to do an open surgery as an emergency because the patient has blah, blah, blah. So what's the benefit-risk ratio? Is it 1% of polyps? So you have a 99% chance that these if they go in and they find ten polyps. There's a 99% chance that none of them are going to be cancers. They don't have the data. Yeah, so I'll do Cologuard any day And it's because we only see the failures.

Kim Pittis:
That's right.

Dr. Carol:
And I admit to being prejudice. I'm quite open. I never, ever walk into a hospital and expect to walk out alive.

Kim Pittis:
Geez.

Dr. Carol:
Yep.

Kim Pittis:
All right. It is 4:00. My phone is going off.

Dr. Carol:
Oh, we did it again. Here's my quote on progress or progression. Progress is not inevitable. It is up to us to create it.

Dr. Carol:
Absolutely.

Kim Pittis:
So I liked this quote for the patients that sometimes don't see the progress, we have to remind them where we started and how far they've come, but that it is not a donation. You it is not a given. They have to work at it. And as they come from the starting point to the part where they usually start complaining again, it's like losing that last 2%. So maybe there needs to be a little bit more effort on everybody's part to get them over to that last little piece.

Dr. Carol:
The other piece of that is data. Yeah, so we haven't made any improvements. So wait. So on every chart note page, I have a ten-centimeter line and a paragraph. Yeah. And you have an Oswestry that you fill out every month. And your Oswestry used to be 87. Or used to be 62. And now it's 87. And then it's 91. And as you progress, it's incremental. And the other piece of the progression the phrase used was working on it last night when I was going through this business with the brain. Creating the image in the patient's mind of progress. Little aqueduct of gray and the power of visualization is the patient's contribution. It's not just doing. It's not just exercising. It's not just going for a walk. The placebo effect is 30%, and the placebo effect is believing that you can recover. So my MS patient, whose grip strength went from 5 pounds to 15 and a hand that doesn't move. He already did the hard work. He believes that he is going to get out of his chair. His mind is already seeing his body as improving and sending those descending messages down into his nervous system. Saying it's going to get better. Don't you just love progress?

Kim Pittis:
I love it. And I love you. And I love Wednesdays.

Dr. Carol:
I love Wednesdays. Thanks, everybody, for being here.

Kim Pittis:
See you next week.

Dr. Carol:
See you next week.

Kevin:
The Frequency Specific Microcurrent podcast has been produced by Frequency Specific Seminars for entertainment, educational and information purposes only. The information opinion provided in the podcast are not medical advice. Do not create any type of doctor patient relationship, and, unless expressly stated, do not reflect the opinions of its affiliates, subsidiaries or sponsors or the hosts, or any of the podcast guests or affiliated professional organizations. No person should act or refrain from acting on the basis of the content provided in any podcast without first seeking appropriate medical advice and counseling. No information provided in any podcast shall be used as a substitute for personalized medical advice and counseling. Fss expressly disclaims any and all liability relating to any actions taken or not taken based on or any contents of this podcast.

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