Neurological pain

Neurological pain

Neurological pain is especially hard to treat, as it involves neurological memory of pain, central sensitization, and is often related to other chronic diseases that keep feeding into the reason for the pain, such as diabetes. As well, long term pain, such as CRPS, or chronic regional pain syndrome, phantom limb pain, and even migraines, are all related to trauma, at some point in your life, in the neurological system. All of these must have a reset of the default mode network in the brain to allow for healing of the central sensitization. They do this by blocking the NMDA and glutamate receptor sites, those responsible for receiving signals about pain from the outer reaches of your body. When blocking these receptors, the pain cannot transmit. 

There is also a process of neuroplastic change that occurs with subsequent infusion treatments that will change the way the signals are transmitted to the brain. In doing this the pain cycle can be interrupted and changed into that of a different end result: no pain. Of course, along with these, treatments, therapy will help release the trauma emotional scars that are the root cause.