▸ Get Dr. Chiu's new book Leaky Brain Fix here www.amazon.com/Leaky-Brain-Fix-Surprising-Concussion-ebook/dp/B0BP8713QH ▸ Transcript: theenergyblueprint.com/optimizing-your-brain-health-dr-titus-chiu/ 📌 Want even more tips? Subscribe to This Channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCnQo6oCvS6YuvaablyMT_sw
Thanks so much for this super interesting approach. Dr. Titus Chiu's remote speech helps me more than any neurologist in live has done, performing the standard tests on me without any findings (am situated in Berlin). In context of my depression, connected fatique and chronic pain it is source of so much inspiration to hear how important the mindset is for neurological processes and the possibilities opening up from using the concept of neuroplasticity for own healing. After healing, I will go on and work on my super brain!
I enjoyed this very much due to the fact that I've been in two major accidents and have suffered concussions twice. Again, I enjoyed this very much. Thank you
My brain was tired when I started listening. Too much random talking with not much info. I'm at 26 minutes and need a break. Inflammation, gut problems, physical tear of the barrier, mental distress... I will take a break and lessen my chance of Alzheimer's, even though I don't think this passed the chicken or the egg first test. An infected brain is likely to be depressed, no? And also prone to Alzheimer's, no? This tires my brain, listening to things that are not sussed out. Big sigh. What does a big sigh do for the brain? I've noticed my dog give a big sigh sometimes, which I interpret as not being in a good mood. What's behind that?
Thanks Ari. Very interesting to see the application of “your approach” to the brain. As always, it tells you that you are responsible for optimising your own health, especially armed with the knowledge gained from someone who has specialised. It seems to me that the body needs dynamic, pulsatile stimuli. It then responds in a similar fashion ……
Is it misleading for a chiropractor to label themselves as a neurologist? And worse yet, when you ask directly about his background he is not straight forward in his answer. Be proud. Additionally he talks about eyes quite a bit yet does not mention vision rehab specialists. Should I go to a chiropractor to assess my vision or a qualified vision specialist (optometrist)? Jack of all trades master of none?
Not sure it's misleading. Chiropractors are, by definition, healthcare professionals (often doctors) who specialize in the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of musculoskeletal disorders, particularly those related to the spine. Their expertise lies in assessing and managing conditions that affect the NEUROmusculoskeletal system, which includes the muscles, bones, joints, and NERVES of the body.
@@TheEnergyBlueprint I am an optometrist that specializes in functional vision. It would be blasphamy for me to call myself a functional ophthalmologist (the MD’s of our profession). I am not minimizing the expertise of the chiropractic field I am just not sure why Dr. Chiu is not straightforward in his response. He seems like a knowledgable guy but does not acknowledge or is possibly ignorant of the field of vision rehab with its own specialists in this area of healthcare. Disappointing to say the least.
Hi Dan, Please allow me to clarify some points in your responses since I am a holistic health coach that has been working with Dr Chiu for the last 5 months and seeing amazing results. He has helped me recover from functional neurological disorder, general anxiety disorder and CPTSD. There is nothing to be mis-lead by. He is a chriropractic clinical neurologist. So yes, as Ari points out very well, a neurologist that tackles neurological disorders by way of the skeleto/muscular/neuro connection. There are many branches of neurology so even a neurologist as you may define it, will be a specialist in a particular branch of the nervous system. Dr Chiu mainly helps people with concussion which is highly linked to the skeletal system, especially if been in an accident. When I saw him in person for assessment he pretty much cured my balance issue over night by adjustments alone! Whilst those skeletal imbalance were there before I got FND, they only became the root cause of my balance after, because the neural network in my brain shifted due to chronic stress. Unfortunately the term ‘Functional’ is mis-leading. Functional in the way he is using means finding the root cause of unwanted symptoms by looking at the brain through holistic ways, namely neuroskeletal and nutrition, although he knows much much more about health and the brain than just those probably because he’s been helping people and getting great results for 17 years. Functional vision as far as I can see means that the eyes are working as they should. The eyes are functional. Not the same. He is using eye movements as a one diagnostic tool in a whole host of other assessments to work out which hemispheres and regions of the brain are either under or over active. Likely other things that I am not aware of. From what I understand and what I have experienced, he doesn’t need to know about eye rehab because his target market doesn’t have eye problems as a ROOT CAUSE. Yes, they may have vision difficulties, I did. But the root cause is brain imbalances. No doubt if someone has a serious eye complaint and the root cause is the eye, they would see you. If you had some kind of vision problem but the eye looked ok, the question becomes, what is the root cause? In that case, you would want to assess what’s happened in your past? Accident?, head injury, whiplash? Hmm, maybe it’s the brain as the root cause in which case a chiropractic clinical neurologist would be a good idea. But not a general chiropractor because they aren’t trained in the nervous system. To label him jack of all trades master of none is an interesting comment. If I maybe suggest that you assess your use of throw away derogatory comments that mean nothing because they don’t do you any favours. I would class myself as ‘jack of all trades’ as you put it and proud of it. I understand just ‘enough’ about many many aspects of health so that I have a very high health status, especially now after working with Dr Chiu. Is Ari a Master or Jack? Well, he is jack as well and also gets amazing results. Just because someone doesn’t have letters after their name and hasn’t just specialised in one specific area doesn’t mean they don’t get great results for people. In fact, they usually get the BEST results because they deal with how the body functions. Which is holistically. Obviously you know this so why the derogatory comments? Then to go on in your second comment about not minimising him! Dr Chiu is a master of his craft, as is Ari. They know ENOUGH about a lot of areas. And who knows everything about the brain anyway? Nobody…
@@alexkerr80 thank you for your detailed reply. I am happy to hear that you have received excellent care and are in a good place. I am not trying to minimize Dr, Chiu and his expertise. Functional vision involves many areas of visual abilities and skills. Convergence, accommodation, saccades, pursuits, fixation, perception and integration are just to name a few. Visual pathways are pervasive in the brain and are often impacted after head injury. If someone has expertise in concussion and recognizes vision as an area of impact and does not mention or is aware of the field of neuro-visual rehabilitation then there is a concern. There was not one mention in the interview of other inter-professional collaboration which is where the Jack of all comment stemmed from. I would guess Dr. Chiu would approach this differently if given another opportunity? I don’t care to get more involved. I appreciate that he is helping people and that is wonderful. My opinion and practice is to have a collaborative approach.
▸ Get Dr. Chiu's new book Leaky Brain Fix here www.amazon.com/Leaky-Brain-Fix-Surprising-Concussion-ebook/dp/B0BP8713QH
▸ Transcript: theenergyblueprint.com/optimizing-your-brain-health-dr-titus-chiu/
📌 Want even more tips? Subscribe to This Channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCnQo6oCvS6YuvaablyMT_sw
Thanks so much for this super interesting approach. Dr. Titus Chiu's remote speech helps me more than any neurologist in live has done, performing the standard tests on me without any findings (am situated in Berlin). In context of my depression, connected fatique and chronic pain it is source of so much inspiration to hear how important the mindset is for neurological processes and the possibilities opening up from using the concept of neuroplasticity for own healing. After healing, I will go on and work on my super brain!
I hope your super brain manifests as soon as possible so your recovery is complete.
I enjoyed this very much due to the fact that I've been in two major accidents and have suffered concussions twice. Again, I enjoyed this very much. Thank you
There will be lots here that will be helpful then.
I love Dr. Chiu! Thanks for bringing him. I’m still waiting for his latest book about leaky brain to be a paperback instead of ebook! 😀
Me too!
My brain was tired when I started listening.
Too much random talking with not much info.
I'm at 26 minutes and need a break.
Inflammation, gut problems, physical tear of the barrier, mental distress... I will take a break and lessen my chance of Alzheimer's, even though I don't think this passed the chicken or the egg first test.
An infected brain is likely to be depressed, no?
And also prone to Alzheimer's, no?
This tires my brain, listening to things that are not sussed out.
Big sigh.
What does a big sigh do for the brain?
I've noticed my dog give a big sigh sometimes, which I interpret as not being in a good mood.
What's behind that?
A big sign (or long outbreath) moves the nervous system into parasympathetic dominance.
@@TheEnergyBlueprint
Do you have any idea about what causes a dog to do it?
Great conversation! Most definitely, I'll check Dr. Chiu out 😁
He's got some great ideas for sure!
Thanks Ari. Very interesting to see the application of “your approach” to the brain. As always, it tells you that you are responsible for optimising your own health, especially armed with the knowledge gained from someone who has specialised. It seems to me that the body needs dynamic, pulsatile stimuli. It then responds in a similar fashion ……
Nice described!
Thank you. Very interesting talk. I have to listen it again.
Thanks for listening
Excellent
Thank you so much 😀
AMEN.
Amen, indeed!
Is it misleading for a chiropractor to label themselves as a neurologist? And worse yet, when you ask directly about his background he is not straight forward in his answer. Be proud. Additionally he talks about eyes quite a bit yet does not mention vision rehab specialists. Should I go to a chiropractor to assess my vision or a qualified vision specialist (optometrist)? Jack of all trades master of none?
Not sure it's misleading.
Chiropractors are, by definition, healthcare professionals (often doctors) who specialize in the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of musculoskeletal disorders, particularly those related to the spine. Their expertise lies in assessing and managing conditions that affect the NEUROmusculoskeletal system, which includes the muscles, bones, joints, and NERVES of the body.
@@TheEnergyBlueprint I am an optometrist that specializes in functional vision. It would be blasphamy for me to call myself a functional ophthalmologist (the MD’s of our profession). I am not minimizing the expertise of the chiropractic field I am just not sure why Dr. Chiu is not straightforward in his response. He seems like a knowledgable guy but does not acknowledge or is possibly ignorant of the field of vision rehab with its own specialists in this area of healthcare. Disappointing to say the least.
Hi Dan,
Please allow me to clarify some points in your responses since I am a holistic health coach that has been working with Dr Chiu for the last 5 months and seeing amazing results. He has helped me recover from functional neurological disorder, general anxiety disorder and CPTSD.
There is nothing to be mis-lead by. He is a chriropractic clinical neurologist. So yes, as Ari points out very well, a neurologist that tackles neurological disorders by way of the skeleto/muscular/neuro connection. There are many branches of neurology so even a neurologist as you may define it, will be a specialist in a particular branch of the nervous system. Dr Chiu mainly helps people with concussion which is highly linked to the skeletal system, especially if been in an accident.
When I saw him in person for assessment he pretty much cured my balance issue over night by adjustments alone! Whilst those skeletal imbalance were there before I got FND, they only became the root cause of my balance after, because the neural network in my brain shifted due to chronic stress.
Unfortunately the term ‘Functional’ is mis-leading. Functional in the way he is using means finding the root cause of unwanted symptoms by looking at the brain through holistic ways, namely neuroskeletal and nutrition, although he knows much much more about health and the brain than just those probably because he’s been helping people and getting great results for 17 years.
Functional vision as far as I can see means that the eyes are working as they should. The eyes are functional. Not the same.
He is using eye movements as a one diagnostic tool in a whole host of other assessments to work out which hemispheres and regions of the brain are either under or over active. Likely other things that I am not aware of.
From what I understand and what I have experienced, he doesn’t need to know about eye rehab because his target market doesn’t have eye problems as a ROOT CAUSE. Yes, they may have vision difficulties, I did. But the root cause is brain imbalances. No doubt if someone has a serious eye complaint and the root cause is the eye, they would see you.
If you had some kind of vision problem but the eye looked ok, the question becomes, what is the root cause? In that case, you would want to assess what’s happened in your past? Accident?, head injury, whiplash? Hmm, maybe it’s the brain as the root cause in which case a chiropractic clinical neurologist would be a good idea. But not a general chiropractor because they aren’t trained in the nervous system.
To label him jack of all trades master of none is an interesting comment. If I maybe suggest that you assess your use of throw away derogatory comments that mean nothing because they don’t do you any favours.
I would class myself as ‘jack of all trades’ as you put it and proud of it. I understand just ‘enough’ about many many aspects of health so that I have a very high health status, especially now after working with Dr Chiu. Is Ari a Master or Jack? Well, he is jack as well and also gets amazing results.
Just because someone doesn’t have letters after their name and hasn’t just specialised in one specific area doesn’t mean they don’t get great results for people. In fact, they usually get the BEST results because they deal with how the body functions. Which is holistically.
Obviously you know this so why the derogatory comments? Then to go on in your second comment about not minimising him! Dr Chiu is a master of his craft, as is Ari. They know ENOUGH about a lot of areas. And who knows everything about the brain anyway?
Nobody…
@@alexkerr80 thank you for your detailed reply. I am happy to hear that you have received excellent care and are in a good place.
I am not trying to minimize Dr, Chiu and his expertise. Functional vision involves many areas of visual abilities and skills. Convergence, accommodation, saccades, pursuits, fixation, perception and integration are just to name a few. Visual pathways are pervasive in the brain and are often impacted after head injury. If someone has expertise in concussion and recognizes vision as an area of impact and does not mention or is aware of the field of neuro-visual rehabilitation then there is a concern. There was not one mention in the interview of other inter-professional collaboration which is where the Jack of all comment stemmed from. I would guess Dr. Chiu would approach this differently if given another opportunity? I don’t care to get more involved. I appreciate that he is helping people and that is wonderful. My opinion and practice is to have a collaborative approach.
how can you talk so much and say so little
Please let me know what you would have liked to learn from this episode but found absent.
Exactly.
@@TheEnergyBlueprint I prefer practical advice with some science or anecdotical evidence behind it. Focus more on that.
@@TheEnergyBlueprintI got absolutely no advice