Statistical Studies
Our typical Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit patient comes in sick and goes out well. For many, this is after decades of suffering. Naturally, there are those who just do not respond to treatment, and fortunately they are few. We will go for months with almost no failures and then may have a group of twenty with four people who experience little or no response. We are happy these numbers are small, but we continue to study and test new procedures that may bring relief to everyone.
The answers given in the form included below include many symptoms that may not have been caused by Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit. Therefore, at the end of treatment the patient may still have symptoms from a knee that was injured years ago, which continues to cause pain but has nothing to do with Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit. Naturally, this would not disappear with the treatment and would leave pain figures on the study that hurt our statistics. So as you look at the results, remember that some of the symptoms you are seeing are leftover old injuries and have a negative impact on the statistics. Even so, the overall results reveal a 73% drop in symptoms. In addition, the original symptoms are with medications and the end statistics are with little or no medications.
The figures in the following study were compiled from questionnaires, completed without help or persuasion from our staff, by patients who volunteered to be in this study. The “patient numbers” represent each patient participating in the study. “Total First Pain” represents how much pain the patient was experiencing upon arrival at our office. This was determined by asking the patient to rate their pain on a scale of 0-10, 0 being no pain and 10 being severe. The numbers were all added together to reach the numbers below. The “Total Last Stats” are a total of all of the pain ratings at the date of their last report.
Result Totals on Fifteen Patients Surveyed
73% improvement
It should be noted that during this time there were two patients who did not respond well (approximately 25% better) but did not fill out the survey.
Study with 70 Patients 10-8-08
The following study was used with the above criteria and only the results have been published in the interest of brevity. There were a few additions in symptoms added. The entire study can be e-mailed to you upon request. You can see individual patients (listed by number not name) and see the individual results. Also on the spreadsheet you can look at individual symptoms and see how they responded. This study would have been included here but it is 130 pages.
Again, these numbers include all problems and pain the patients had at the time of their initial intake including non- Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit symptoms and the fact that most patients were on narcotics at the time of their intake. Further at the time of their release the patients were off of most of their medications and still had the following results.
Number of patients in the study: 70
Average decrease in the Frequency of Symptoms:
*71.69%
Average decrease in the intensity of Symptoms:
*70.78%
Surgery and Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit Study
The next study was done to see the impact surgery was having on Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit.
Number of people in the surgical study 74
The number of patients who had surgery with the intent of helping their Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit symptoms:
Fifty-two patients had surgery, that’s 70.27% of the seventy-four people in the study having surgery.
Twenty-nine people who had surgery had their Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit get worse, That’s 65.38% of the fifty-two people who had surgery got worse.
Two patients who had surgery had their Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit get better, that’s 3.85% of the people who had surgery.
Three patients had multiple surgeries and got better after one and worse after another. This represents 5.77% of the people who had surgery.
74 Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit patients
52 Patients who had surgeries
29 Worse
2 Better
3 Mixed results
The rest no change
*Of the Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit patients having surgery, 65.38% had their Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit symptoms increase.
Weekly Report Survey
The next study was done off of our “Weekly Report”. We use weekly reports to track our patients’ main Atlanto-Meningeal Space Deficit symptoms. We graph these results to determine their response weekly and to determine when they are stable enough to leave or go to maintenance treatment.
The results from forty-nine patients with no one eliminated were as follows.
*23 patients were over 90% symptom free, that’s 46.9%
*40 patients were over 80% symptom free, that’s 81.6%
*The 49 patient averages was 85% symptom free
Long term studies both written and oral showed an overall 6% increase in symptoms after ending treatment