Do You Have Internal Jugular Vein Compression? What Does that Have to Do with CCI?

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  • Опубликовано: 17 апр 2022
  • Dr. Centeno discusses internal jugular vein compression. What does that have to with CCI? Is this a normal variant? Meaning can you have IJV compression and it is not causing your symptoms?
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Комментарии • 34

  • @caioaugusto6074
    @caioaugusto6074 Год назад +1

    Just logged in to congratulate and thank you for this awesome video. Thanks for the knowledge, doc!

  • @regina6838
    @regina6838 7 месяцев назад

    I appreciate your care in presenting it so it can be understood easily, by anyone. Thank you

  • @hollywoodn_t
    @hollywoodn_t 9 месяцев назад +2

    Variably in symptoms depends on pressures. The heart also does this. You could do the same with a random selection in the public with calcium/blockages in their arteries and they would have no symptoms. At some point the body comes under stress and the brain is impacted. The stress on the jugular vein is too much (under certain circumstances). Then the feedback loops are impacted. Then symptoms persist. The body is trying to protect from future issues due to the pathology in the physiology. Just because it exists with no obvious symptoms doesn’t mean it’s ok. That’s like saying atherosclerosis is ok if there are no symptoms. It isn’t. And yet it is probably present in a large selection of the general public.

  • @andresavelar8352
    @andresavelar8352 Год назад +1

    Great video

  • @theeskatelife
    @theeskatelife 2 года назад +7

    just because veins collateralize doesn't mean its healthy and not causing issues. collateralization is a sign there is an issue. if they are collateralized that means they are working harder than normal and that is not right

    • @brendanschroeder1862
      @brendanschroeder1862 Год назад +1

      On the contrary, If you are able to create collaterals, that is a very good sign you are healthy in the repairing regard.

    • @tomastorn1
      @tomastorn1 Год назад +2

      @@brendanschroeder1862 And still does not mean that repairing skill is enough to compensate all the troubles an IJV compression could create in some people. But of course, could be enough on some of them. As Dr. said... you can not tell for sure when IJV is a problem.

    • @marionharris5952
      @marionharris5952 10 месяцев назад

      Good point

    • @GoodTV285
      @GoodTV285 18 часов назад

      @@tomastorn1
      What they don’t tell you is strengthening your cervical muscles is the key, strong ligaments are useless if you muscles are weak, weak tendons aren’t an issue if your muscles are strong the muscles keep the vertebrae in position

  • @DollysParadise
    @DollysParadise Год назад +1

    Thank you for making this video?
    Do the compression cause white matter or/and chronic small vessel ischemic disease?

  • @amandahudson6348
    @amandahudson6348 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for sharing! Love your videos. Does your office offer Telehealth appts. In order to get testing needed to diagnose this type of problem?

    • @centenohome
      @centenohome  Год назад

      Hi Amanda,
      Please reach out to our office and they discuss telehealth options with you. 303-429-6448

  • @Michellepuccio
    @Michellepuccio Месяц назад +1

    I am feeling very lousy worse than usual this past week if I don’t have my shoulders up in my head bent back so I can feel the drainage of the vein down my neck my heart starts to feel extremely heavy and I have to lay down please give insight

  • @dustyfeller
    @dustyfeller Год назад +1

    38:00 fullness, sense of fluid; 44:00 arcuate foremen

  • @Ismimical
    @Ismimical 9 месяцев назад

    Can this compression cause pain when reading, ringing in the ears and trouble looking at screens?

  • @bhupendrasingharora6183
    @bhupendrasingharora6183 2 года назад +1

    Sir please can you give your appointment so that i can consult you online

  • @Goodmorning1221-
    @Goodmorning1221- 5 месяцев назад

    8:30 Ultrasound like the doppler ultrasound ? But if the operator does it properly, it's fine, right ? Because if the patient moves like you mentioned, you just have to correct the position and the problem is gone.

  • @shannonbrown7181
    @shannonbrown7181 Год назад +3

    Hi Dr. Centeno - Can you help me understand which doctors can help me diagnose this issue? I have many of the symptoms, which have been escalating for at least a few years, but I am being dismissed or symptoms treated piece-meal by the PCPs, eye doctors, and Neurologists I have seen.

  • @hollywoodn_t
    @hollywoodn_t 9 месяцев назад

    Blood flow isn’t stable. This is the issue with imaging also. Bodies move and the physiology changes. If there is pathology it is dependent on these variables. It is totally inappropriate for practitioners to think a pathology isn’t the cause of symptoms just because it exists in some without symptoms! There are genetic variabilities also.

  • @vrindersingh1495
    @vrindersingh1495 Год назад +2

    Very good video , My right Internal jugular vein is compressed when my head is turned to the left and is ok when head turned to right ( a catheter angiogram has shown this ) , my neurological symptoms are better when keep my head turned to the right and dramatically worse when turned to the left, however my left internal jugular vein which is my dominant one is fine . Could this be the cause of my symptoms? And also is it true that the internal jugular veins collapse in the upright position and drainage is via the vertebral venous plexus. Does this mean that the internal jugular veins have no function when standing up and doing physical activity?

    • @marionharris5952
      @marionharris5952 Год назад

      What are your symptoms

    • @vrindersingh1495
      @vrindersingh1495 Год назад +2

      Hi there thanks for asking , I have pulsating tinnitus and constant eye pain and irritation, headaches and dizziness. I also have extreme fatigue of the limbs but everything goes away when I turn my head to the right or if I lie down for a while .

    • @GoodTV285
      @GoodTV285 18 часов назад

      A stent would help you

  • @m.h.-s.2019
    @m.h.-s.2019 Год назад +2

    please don't forget the eagle syndrome here

  • @tomastorn1
    @tomastorn1 Год назад +4

    Why AO isn't a non-invasive option since C1 is usually one of the culprits of these compressions?
    Why jumping directly into PRP or surgery and not thinking of AO as a viable option? I'm confused on that part.

    • @andytorres8507
      @andytorres8507 22 дня назад

      What's AO?

    • @tomastorn1
      @tomastorn1 20 дней назад

      @@andytorres8507 Atlas Orthogonal. A kind of subtle chiropractic care where a chiropractor moves your atlas with a device. Tons of youtube videos to know more about it. Not every country has AO tho'. And not sure if it could make it worse for CCI/AAI since ligaments are not doing its work.

    • @itsdonnairene
      @itsdonnairene 7 дней назад +1

      For anyone with a connective tissue disorder, it will likely not hold. I tried AO and we did before and after pictures each time and it wouldn’t last even 24 hours.

    • @GoodTV285
      @GoodTV285 18 часов назад

      @@itsdonnairene
      Buy the iron neck device, it works wonders
      Strong neck muscles is the cure
      Muscles hold it all together

  • @okzoomer5728
    @okzoomer5728 Месяц назад +1

    Can this venous compression lead to downstream complications or changes in venous flow/pressure such as weakness and numbness in the limbs and muscles below the neck? I have slight transverse ligament instability, synovial joint inflammation in the C1-C2 area, cervicla curve reversal, and likely intracranial hypertension arising from this specific problem.
    But whenever my C1 moves slightly abnormally to one side or too far forward I get stroke like attacks very suddenly that look like myelopathy. I don't have an upright MRI but the supine MRI did not show my dens hitting my spinal cord, or that the transverse ligament was nearly that hypermobile enough to do that according to DMX. There's no basilar invagination on my MRI. Transcranial doppler came back negative for VBI as well.
    So my next thought is either a CSF flow problem or a vascular one that's somehow affecting my brainstem or upper spinal cord as a result of instability.

    • @GoodTV285
      @GoodTV285 18 часов назад

      Yes poor venous flow does have an effect downstream, I had prolo but it didn’t help much, but what I found of cervical muscle exercises had almost cured all of my problems, it’s only been 1 month since I bought the iron neck device, strong muscles correct the alignment

  • @simo-dv5xk
    @simo-dv5xk 9 месяцев назад

    Can IJV become calcified if irritated or conpressed for many years?

    • @GoodTV285
      @GoodTV285 18 часов назад

      No, veins don’t calcify to my knowledge