



Taking Control of TMJ: Your Total Wellness Program for Recovering from Temporomandibular Joint Pain, Whiplash, Fibromyalgia, and Related Disorders [Uppgaard, Robert] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Taking Control of TMJ: Your Total Wellness Program for Recovering from Temporomandibular Joint Pain, Whiplash, Fibromyalgia, and Related Disorders Review: Informative, empowering and effective - I caught my clenching and/or bruxing early. However I'd chipped a rear molar in my sleep. Both of my rear molar were extremely temperature and pressure sensitive to the point that eating, drinking and tooth brushing were pure misery. I suffered from a constant sick headache. Bright lights and moderately loud sounds made it feel much worse. If I happened to accidently graze a rear-upper molar with a lower one, the pain just about sent me through the roof. I seriously had visions of having both of those teeth pulled as they hurt almost as much as a bona fide toothache. Sadly this book told of desperate people who had done exactly that under similar circumstances. But their tooth remained because they never treated the cause of it. Since I found it highly unlikely that I developed abscesses in both upper-rear molars simultaneously, TMJ seemed a likely culprit. Hence I found this book: This book explains the causes of your suffering so that it's not so frightening, and it give you options so that you don't additionally feel like a powerless victim at the mercy of the overpriced and cash-crazed American medical system that seems obsessed with drugging you or cutting you. Sadly such approaches have made things far worse for TMJ sufferers, and even more sadly, they may have been entirely unnecessary for many such sufferers. While there are many alternative. noninvasive and VASTLY less expensive strategies in this book, for me hot compresses provided short-term quick tangible relief when pressed against jaw joint and muscles. In conjunction with these muscle balms such as arnica gel, its attached homeopathic pellets as well as Tiger balm provided partial temporary analgesic relief on my cheek, jaw, temple and forehead muscles so I could at least get to sleep. Just be careful not to get the stuff in your eyes. This was all fine and good for treating the symptoms of my TMJ, but it wasn't enough. I wanted the cure. For me at least, I didn't discover the REAL cure until several miserable days later which is as follows: In conjunction with the aforementioned hot compresses, it consisted of my best friend telling me about Dr. Oz's suggestion of using a wine cork vertically between the front upper and lower teeth so that the massester muscles can relax into a stretch. It really was that simple. While your masseter (jaw) muscle are stretching you can lie down, sit up, walk, drive, read, watch TV or whatever. And if your significant other ever told you to "put a cork in it," well then...there's that too. I imagine if you do an advanced Google search such as: "Dr. Oz" and "wine cork" and TMJ, that should find it quick. Be aware that like during any stretch of a spasmed muscle, masseter muscles with TMJ are particularly stiff and might even be a trifle sore thus requiring more than just a single effort, or a brief one for that matter. Keep in mind that during the first part of the stretch, your referred pain (in my case my upper-rear teeth) hurt more for a few dozen seconds. But being accustomed to that from yoga I stuck with it. You need to let go, relax and breath into the stretch. It hurt like blazes at first, but it let go bit by bit until miraculously it disappeared altogether. What was at least as remarkable though, was that during the stretch the adjacent forehead, temple and scalp muscles muscles (the cause of your peripheral headaches and eye pain, by the way) abruptly let go and relaxed from trying to compensate for the misalignment of the masseters. As a result, the peripheral headaches and eye strain pain vanished immediately. Bonnie Prudden's book explains why this is so. It's really a helpful book so that you have the overall understanding of why your eyes and head hurts too during TMJ. Since then if I've an occasional twinge due to stress, I nightly resume wearing the brand name mouth guard called "The Doctor's Night Guard" well, ah... nightly, just in case I'm bruxing. And during the day I resume the cork stretching, and that does the trick. The last time I had to do so the tooth sensitivity (minor to moderate that time) was gone in less than 24 hours including time asleep. In addition, if you're suffering from TMJ, someone I know also swears by her chiropractor's use of an ultrasonic muscle massage. I personally never tried that because I never needed to, but if my suggestions do not work for you, then that might be an option as well. Otherwise do like I did and research your options before you let anyone do anything to you that very well may be irreversible. Review: An Absolute must for TMJD Sufferers. - After suffering for at least 13 years with constant vertigo and phantom ear problems, I found the answer behind the symptoms. I had indepth testing of my ears and brain. No tumors and not even hearing loss even though my hearing was muffled. I was diagnosed with TMJD about 13 years ago but when I was told I had TMJD all that was said was I have a jaw disorder. I took it upon myself to read blogs of other TMJD sufferers and low and behold, there it was, the demand that people with this disorder must read this amazing book. It pin points trigger points and muscles and what they cause if they are in disstress. It gives exercises to help too. I love how it shows diagrams of muscles and explains the details of fascia and the workings of it all. It was short book packed with answers to long sot after questions of pain and medical issues that cannot be solved or founded. The author is a doctor who does not want surgery and pain killers and tries to help in the most common sensical way. Great book and I feel empowered and educated. It is nice to understand the workings of the amazing machine called our bodies but even more so when there is a problem. God Bless you Dr. Uppgaard for this wonderful book and those of you who suffer. There is hope!
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,382,661 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #16 in Craniomandibular & Temporomandibular #637 in Musculoskeletal Diseases (Books) #1,277 in Healing |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (146) |
| Dimensions | 5.75 x 0.5 x 9.25 inches |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 1572241268 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1572241268 |
| Item Weight | 12 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 200 pages |
| Publication date | January 1, 1999 |
| Publisher | New Harbinger Publications |
M**Y
Informative, empowering and effective
I caught my clenching and/or bruxing early. However I'd chipped a rear molar in my sleep. Both of my rear molar were extremely temperature and pressure sensitive to the point that eating, drinking and tooth brushing were pure misery. I suffered from a constant sick headache. Bright lights and moderately loud sounds made it feel much worse. If I happened to accidently graze a rear-upper molar with a lower one, the pain just about sent me through the roof. I seriously had visions of having both of those teeth pulled as they hurt almost as much as a bona fide toothache. Sadly this book told of desperate people who had done exactly that under similar circumstances. But their tooth remained because they never treated the cause of it. Since I found it highly unlikely that I developed abscesses in both upper-rear molars simultaneously, TMJ seemed a likely culprit. Hence I found this book: This book explains the causes of your suffering so that it's not so frightening, and it give you options so that you don't additionally feel like a powerless victim at the mercy of the overpriced and cash-crazed American medical system that seems obsessed with drugging you or cutting you. Sadly such approaches have made things far worse for TMJ sufferers, and even more sadly, they may have been entirely unnecessary for many such sufferers. While there are many alternative. noninvasive and VASTLY less expensive strategies in this book, for me hot compresses provided short-term quick tangible relief when pressed against jaw joint and muscles. In conjunction with these muscle balms such as arnica gel, its attached homeopathic pellets as well as Tiger balm provided partial temporary analgesic relief on my cheek, jaw, temple and forehead muscles so I could at least get to sleep. Just be careful not to get the stuff in your eyes. This was all fine and good for treating the symptoms of my TMJ, but it wasn't enough. I wanted the cure. For me at least, I didn't discover the REAL cure until several miserable days later which is as follows: In conjunction with the aforementioned hot compresses, it consisted of my best friend telling me about Dr. Oz's suggestion of using a wine cork vertically between the front upper and lower teeth so that the massester muscles can relax into a stretch. It really was that simple. While your masseter (jaw) muscle are stretching you can lie down, sit up, walk, drive, read, watch TV or whatever. And if your significant other ever told you to "put a cork in it," well then...there's that too. I imagine if you do an advanced Google search such as: "Dr. Oz" and "wine cork" and TMJ, that should find it quick. Be aware that like during any stretch of a spasmed muscle, masseter muscles with TMJ are particularly stiff and might even be a trifle sore thus requiring more than just a single effort, or a brief one for that matter. Keep in mind that during the first part of the stretch, your referred pain (in my case my upper-rear teeth) hurt more for a few dozen seconds. But being accustomed to that from yoga I stuck with it. You need to let go, relax and breath into the stretch. It hurt like blazes at first, but it let go bit by bit until miraculously it disappeared altogether. What was at least as remarkable though, was that during the stretch the adjacent forehead, temple and scalp muscles muscles (the cause of your peripheral headaches and eye pain, by the way) abruptly let go and relaxed from trying to compensate for the misalignment of the masseters. As a result, the peripheral headaches and eye strain pain vanished immediately. Bonnie Prudden's book explains why this is so. It's really a helpful book so that you have the overall understanding of why your eyes and head hurts too during TMJ. Since then if I've an occasional twinge due to stress, I nightly resume wearing the brand name mouth guard called "The Doctor's Night Guard" well, ah... nightly, just in case I'm bruxing. And during the day I resume the cork stretching, and that does the trick. The last time I had to do so the tooth sensitivity (minor to moderate that time) was gone in less than 24 hours including time asleep. In addition, if you're suffering from TMJ, someone I know also swears by her chiropractor's use of an ultrasonic muscle massage. I personally never tried that because I never needed to, but if my suggestions do not work for you, then that might be an option as well. Otherwise do like I did and research your options before you let anyone do anything to you that very well may be irreversible.
J**L
An Absolute must for TMJD Sufferers.
After suffering for at least 13 years with constant vertigo and phantom ear problems, I found the answer behind the symptoms. I had indepth testing of my ears and brain. No tumors and not even hearing loss even though my hearing was muffled. I was diagnosed with TMJD about 13 years ago but when I was told I had TMJD all that was said was I have a jaw disorder. I took it upon myself to read blogs of other TMJD sufferers and low and behold, there it was, the demand that people with this disorder must read this amazing book. It pin points trigger points and muscles and what they cause if they are in disstress. It gives exercises to help too. I love how it shows diagrams of muscles and explains the details of fascia and the workings of it all. It was short book packed with answers to long sot after questions of pain and medical issues that cannot be solved or founded. The author is a doctor who does not want surgery and pain killers and tries to help in the most common sensical way. Great book and I feel empowered and educated. It is nice to understand the workings of the amazing machine called our bodies but even more so when there is a problem. God Bless you Dr. Uppgaard for this wonderful book and those of you who suffer. There is hope!
K**I
Taking Control of TMJ by Robert Uppgaard
A must read for all TMJ sufferers! I had suffered for about 3 months with TMJ when I purchased this book. It made me aware of my bad habits, especially in terms of poor posture. I have been following the exercises to improve jaw functioning as well as the 20 exercise program for about 3 weeks now and feel better. Also, the Mckenzie books recommended by the author have been very useful for my neck and back. After understanding the physiology of the temporomandibular joint from Uppgaard's book, I went to a dentist who specializes in TMJ mouth guards and had a device made for my lower jaw - its completely rid me of my pain, though the clicking persists. Previously another dentist had given me a useless mouth guard for my upper jaw, but now, armed with knowledge from Uppgaard's book, I was more involved in the decision regarding the type of device that would help my condition.
P**Y
Worked for me- I highly reccomened for TMJ/D
It worked for me. 9 days into the wellness program I was off of all medication. The jaw pain was the first to disappear and the tightness slowly dissipated over the next few weeks. I had been dealing with the most recent flare for months. My range of motion is back! Prior to this flare I dealt with occasion jaw pain.I thought I would never get better. I hope the practices as prescribed by the book are helpful going forward. I feel the best I have felt in a long time. My teeth actually line up better than they have in a long time. The tongue posture recommendation in the book has helped me conquer my clenching habit and relax my face in a way I have not been able to do in years! I highly recommend this book. It helped me take a look at my overall lifestyle and how it influenced all aspects of my health. I wish one of the several health care providers that I saw for this condition had recommended it. I believe I would have had a quicker recovery from this flare. Thank you Dr. Uppgaard! I am grateful this book was available. I can eat pizza again and sing! It has greatly improved my quality of life!
S**A
that's that only TMJ book you need. It is really helpful. tells how many times to do an exercise and how often. it has a questionnaire to find out if one has a TMJ problem, along with other problems, and many other helpful advises. I bought another book also on TMJ, but this one is the best
S**H
Highly detailed and informative, logical to read and with helpful exersises you can start practicing straight away
T**.
Very good.
N**M
i suffered from mild tmj for about a year. again like others i have sought medical help (dentist/GP) i'm actually still waiting for an orthodontist appointment- good old NHS...tired of waiting and pretty deperate i bought a mouth guard from amazon and then this book. within 3 days of only mildly adhering to it's very comprehensive and simple plan i had noticed that my pain had gone from 60% to about 10%...the relief is unreal. this book really helps you understand your condition muscle to muscle and shows how this largely "untreatable" ailment is definately treatable! tips on bad habits, like posture and jaw clenching) right through to what dietry requirements help heal your joints (another good buy from amazon was some glucosamine sulphate 500 mg- not mentioned in the book but considered helpful by many in the field). i also had a dentist appointment today and they asked about the book and the quick result almost like i was there to waste their time! i explained about it and they were impressed! in conclusion- it's simple/it doesn't baffle you with hopefull 'just reduce stress' bushllit/it helps you target bad habits/it helps you access trigger points to reduce muscle tension/ it provides easy excercises and discusses tmj in a clear nicely illustrated way! Best of all it worked for me! simply amazing.
A**R
Really helpful and very informative. Lots of useful hints and tips, exercises and more
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