Muscle Medics Clinic - The Soldier Project

 
 
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The Soldier Project

Currently, I am treating soldiers for concussion.  This is a research project and I am looking for volunteers.

I want to prove that the concussion related symptoms can often be eradicated without the use of Prozac and sleeping pills and anti-anxiety medications.

With each case, I am documenting the injury and the symptoms. Yes, this is a research project, so I will be asking you questions and also requesting that you document your results. Small price to pay if I can get your migraines to disappear, wouldn’t you say?

What I find is that the migraines, the blurred vision, the confusion, the ringing in the ears and inability to sleep.  All of this can be successfully treated with soft tissue therapy. No drugs, no Prozac, no sleeping pills.  Permanently.


My name is Phil Slayton and I was active duty army for 4 years. I served two tours in Iraq as a track/wheel mechanic. My ETS date was March 19 2007.
 
I started to visit Kimberly in December of 2008. I was getting very frequent headaches about four to five times a week and rupturing blood vessels in my left and right eyes. Kimberly started working with me once a week until the headaches slowly started to disappear. It is now the middle of March and it has been a few weeks since I have had a headache and I do not notice any blood vessels popping in my eyes. Kimberly is still continuing to work with me at this time and I hope to continue until service is no longer needed.





The Soldier Project
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The Wounded Warrior Project

The 10 in 10 Project



What is "TBI"?
(Traumatic Brain Injury.)


Questions and answers
about concussion, PTSD,
treatment and recovery.

This is a PDF document;
 click here to download the
latest Adobe PDF reader.



 
To Whom It May Concern

a letter for distribution
to soldiers with TBI.


War Veterans’ Concussions Are Often Overlooked

excellent article from
the New York Times.

(If the above link does not work,
 click here for a repost of the article.)



A Chance for Clues to Brain Injury in Combat Blasts




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