Severe Vertigo Helped - Deep INNER-EAR Pressure Drained, CRACKED, & Relieved

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Your inner ear is the deepest part of your ear. It changes sound waves to electrical signals (nerve impulses) which allows the brain to hear and understand sounds. The inner ear is also crucial for for maintaining balance.
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Dr. Brenda Mondragon, DC Orlando, FL

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I remember feeling exactly like this once. I couldn't get that fullness feeling in my ear to ever go away. The ringing was non-stop, my hearing was muffled, my eye was twitching, my jaw felt like it was constantly needing to be popped and my vertigo made me feel like a drunk sailor. I eventually learned that I had a brain tumor that grew through my ear canal, into my facial cavity and over my temporal lobe. Took 12 yrs but as of last July, I'm finally brain tumor free! Still get vertigo sometimes, but i no longer have my ear canal so that's bound to happen, but it's better than the constant ringing which is now gone!

elenaviaggio
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My mind was blown when you cracked her head by pulling her hair. That was something I'd never seen before. Also, the way you cracked her hips by making her squeeze her legs together...100% mindblown. You really know your profession.

Themoment
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she’s literally so good at what she does. you can see the moments where her eyes ‘shut off’ and she feels for the problem with her fingers (which sometimes can be far more effective). Not only is she compassionate and understanding of what the patient is feeling and going through, she figured out the problem and does specific adjustments to give the patient as much comfort as possible. The atmosphere of the room is inviting and relaxing. Honestly it looks like it would feel simply heavenly to get adjusted by her.

honeyappletoast
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I used to have the same problem! I went to an ENT and was diagnosed with Eustachian tube dysfunction. A couple of years later, I got dental braces for the first time and about a month of wearing rubber bands to correct my overbite, the plugged ears and vertigo was cured!!!

maryahmedina
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Excellence, professionalism, skill and compassion is this doctors norm. Her knowledge of the body is astounding as she listens to her patient while allowing the patient time to relax.

jphillips
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Nice to see the patient’s relief and to hear she is progressively feeling better. Admire Doc the patience and sensitivity in treating this patient with vertigo.

Sunstar
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9:40 she goes into a trance like state when she starts seeing the problem with her fingers instead of her eyes. I do it often when I give a massage. You completely tune into what you feel instead of what you see.

xkencx
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I love the zone out look when she's working like you can see her processing what she's feeling to know what needs to be done.

jackieradley
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I’ve seen quite a few chiros on YouTube. Her empathy for her patients is second to none.

ronwarnick
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I had vertigo last year due to stress. Went to therapy, plus exercised to relieve the symptoms and it worked. Watching this video, I wish I could've had someone do this kind of maneuver to me. Awesome!

chrisolivercjo
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Dec 2006 I had my worst and first, case of vertigo. So bad I could not take care of my 6 month old baby, drive and getting out of bed made me immediately vomit. Sept 2007 I went to see a chiropractor after 2 car accidents 1 day apart from each other. I came down with vertigo again a couple days before my scheduled chiropractic appt. The chiropractor adjusted me and I mentioned my vertigo. Not only did he cure me that day I have never had vertigo again. I'm convinced after child birth my body misaligned in such a way that I started experiencing vertigo after a standard cold. That adjustment aligned me back and I've been great since

mel...s
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She seems like a such a sweetheart, I hope she gets so much better.

MakailaMcDaniel
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If this woman is having true vertigo, I feel bad for her. It makes you truly miserable and you cannot move or do anything. Even when holding still, the room whirls around you and there is nothing you can do to stop it. Finding a focal point on the wall is slightly helpful, but after minutes (or hours) you cannot keep that up. Closing your eyes makes you feel like you are tumbling through space, which is almost worse. It affects your balance to the extreme and even crawling is difficult because to lean to one side and fall over. The high speed carousel feeling makes you nauseous, but you don't usually throw up because you are focusing really hard on trying to "hold still" in your head. It awful. Been there, done that. Good luck to you with your ears. I have similar problems.

kimhall
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I suffered from vertigo and ear pressure/plugged ears feeling or a good 5-6 months and also a headache that lasted 4-5 months in 2019, it was due to depression and anxiety, thanks to taking lots of time off, Lexapro, and Clonazepam drops, i overcame this. The doctor said the anxiety was causing muscles allover my body and head to tense causing this. Stress can cause all of this, take time off people!! Don’t overwork yourselves!

candycologne
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i love that your patient always tells you how she feels every few seconds and you work with the information

celinedd
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Not sure if this is helpful for anyone going through something similar to this, but I found direct correlation between my TMJ, my neck pain and my vertigo/general dizziness. my
stress/anxiety was causing severe TMJ and creating tension down through my jaw, into my neck and down through my shoulders, sort of locking up my neck. TMJ can cause tinnitus in many cases so if you’re experiencing some of these symptoms, the culprit could be your jaw/teeth grinding. frequent massages, massage, chiro, and using a mouth guard helped me a lot.

twinkletinglez
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Her knowledge of the human body and what she does is flawless. Shes what people strive to become in that industry.

tango
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Gosh, I loooove her office. The view is so pretty, and the natural lighting is calming. It just adds to the over all relaxation of her visits☺️

mightyduck
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This video was very interesting to me. As someone who has struggled with vertigo very similar to this patients’ for 4 years, it can be very discouraging not having any answers. I’ve seen an audiologist, a neurologist, and and neuro-ophthalmologist, and have never gotten a clear answer for what causes my constant dizziness. Maybe I’ll have to take a trip down to Florida just to see if this will work for me too!

stormyasmr
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I've had random cases of Vertigo throughout the past two years, and there's little that helps me, but what I've started doing is moving other parts of my body and thinking "what am I moving right now? it's my right hand" and so on; it helps distract my brain from the dizziness. It helps me to kind of "relax" my brain from "spinning panic" and focus on other body parts and realize that I have moved my body into another position (for example sitting up in bed the morning after waking up to the room spinning, just make sure to take your time with it and not rush it), closing my eyes while doing this helps a bunch as you're not getting sensory overloaded because your eyes see the room spinning. They dizziness eventually goes away after days/weeks, but it feels truly stressful and debilitating.

BladeFair