Cranial Osteopathy
Cranial Osteopathy began in the early part of the 20th Century , its instigator
was a man called William Garner Sutherland, who originally trained as an osteopath.
Sutherland developed an interest in the cranium after recognizing that there was
a rhythm in the cerebrospinal fluid surrounding the skull. Cerebrospinal fluid
acts as protection for the brain, as well as supplying nutrients to, and draining
waste products from it. In health, Sutherland found that there would be a regular
pulse of between 12 and 15 beats per minute, and a disturbance of this pulse would
indicate an imbalance somewhere in the body.
A Cranial Osteopath uses tiny, gentle manipulations to the skull, spinal column
and sacral area, with the aim of restoring balance. Other areas of the body may
also be added to achieve maximum results.
Conditions that Cranial Osteopathy claims to help include chronic migraine,
asthma and allergies. It is also used more and more in the treatment of babies
who have had difficult births.
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