I have been experiencing an extremely annoying sensation in the back of my head for over a year now. I wrote about this a while back and I am still not completely right but have made some more improvements since my last post.(see my original post)
healthunlocked.com/parkinso...
I have been from one specialist to another, had mri, cat scan but no one seems to be able to tell me what is the matter with me. All they can come up with is it’s stress or imaginary or hypersensitivity. I have finally been to a chinese medicine expert and have had acupuncture and cupping on the back of my shoulders which has helped quite a bit, then finally massage by the chinese masseuse.
She has performed a diaphragm release on me which has really helped with the tight feeling in the back of my head but now I am locked down and can’t go to see her. I looked it up on google and found these youtube clips. I have started to try these and I am feeling they are very helpful. The weird feeling is gradually reducing. I recommend you try these if you have tightness in the chest, difficulty taking a deep breath or feeling you can’t breathe properly, tight shoulders, stiff neck, feeling of fluid running down the back of your throat, constricted throat, feeling you have a lump or growth in the back of your head.
I continue to think that faulty drainage of the lymphatic system may contribute to some symptoms experienced in PD, and I think stress and anxiety can cause the tightness in the chest which may lead to lower oxygen levels, poor drainage during sleep causing waste products to build up instead of being flushed out.
An early symptom of PD can be anxiety so it is possible the anxiety can be making the condition worse rather than the other way round?
Here’s an earlier post on the glymphatic system.
healthunlocked.com/parkinso...
Here are some techniques for releasing the diaphragm if you suffer from tightness of the chest or breathing difficulties.
athenawarriorfitness.com/re...
massagemag.com/myofascial-r...
muscle-joint-pain.com/trigg...
As well as the diaphragm I have had some relief from releasing the jaw