The symptoms of hypochondria
Although there are a vast number of symptoms in hypochondria there are a few main ones which include persistent ready fatigueability, upper abdominal pain, occasional stabbing and sometimes cramping pains in either or both the lower left and right sides of the chest, and palpitations. There is usually also a form of breathlessness which involves an occasional difficulty getting a full breath, which leaves a sense that not enough air was inhaled, and prompts the person to forcefully inhale several times in sequence to relieve the problem. Other symptoms include neck pain and headaches, lower back pain, kidney pains, and many more. These symptoms occur with great frequency, but vary and change in number and severity from day to day, or week to week, or year to year, and have been causing confusion for patients and doctors alike for thousands of years.
These symptoms do not generally occur in people who have normally shaped spines, or if they do they occur less frequently, and are less in number, variety, and severity. This is because the normal spine is relatively straight, with only a very slight curve, so that all the body weight is directed vertically down it, and with the slight curve having a shock absorbing benefit. However, when the upper spine is stooped there tends to be a corresponding forward arch in the lower spine, and there is usually also a sideways curve in the upper spine, with a sideways curve in the opposite direction in the lower spine, so that the spine has a pronounced S-shape when viewed from the front and the side.This has the combined effect of throwing the weight of the upper body forward and sideways and placing great strain on the spinal muscles, ligaments, bones, and discs, and abnormal pressure on all structures within the chest and abdomen, including the heart, lungs, stomach, and the sternum and the ribs, and the chest and abdominal muscles etc. The stoop strains the neck muscles and can cause neckache, and places pressure on the spinal nerve which produces headache, and the sideways curvature can produce pain in one shoulder or the other. If the stooped person tries to view anything directly in front of them they tend to always lift their eyes and this produces a constant and opposite forward arch in the neck which adds to these problems. If they try to throw their shoulders back to straighten their upper spine the lower spine usually moves forward without the person noticing it, and within a few weeks or months or years their neckache and headache may be relieved prompting them to continue with their apparent cure of those problems, but then they start getting lower back pain. Similarly if they are getting upper abdominal pain when they lean forward they may decide to lift their chest, but this straightens the upper back and throws the lower spine forward again and may produce hemorrhoidal pain. When the patient reports this ongoing catalogue of cures which are soon replaced by new symptoms they become very confused and their doctors add to this problem by dismissing their symptoms as the trivial or entirely imaginary or invented complaints of a sympathy seeking hypochondriac.
After a few years or decades these problems sometimes get worse, particularly if the person is engaged in activities which involve a constant posture, such as constantly laying back (producing neckache) sitting at a desk (producing upper abdominal pain) or constantly standing (producing lower back pain). This is because the constant abnormal mechanical pressures caused by their spinal deformity places persistent strains on particular areas which leads eventually to the weakening and malfunctioning of more structures, and ultimately to actual changes in the shape of the stomach or liver etc., and to degenerative changes and damage to the spine, but doctors usually dismiss these as being coincidences which are irrelevant to the history of symptoms.
Eventually the person may find that if they strain themselves in any way they get fatigue which accrues abnormally and excessively and seriously interferes with their lifestyle, and impairs their capacity for exercise, and they may find that if they lean forward they may get symptoms such as chest pain, or stomach pain, or kidney pain, or breathlessness, which vary in the same activity over a period of months or years. They may get abdominal pains if they lean forward to tie their shoe laces one month but not the next, or they may feel faint or get palpitations if they lean toward the kitchen sink to wash the dishes, or if they lean toward the washing machine to load it with clothes. They may also feel faint and dizzy if they squat down to lift something, and then they may feel faint if they suddenly stand up, or they may feel as if they are going to black out if they bend their neck to look up to the top of a cupboard or shelf. Similarly if they start getting pain in one hip, they may lean to one side to effectively relieve it, but then, within a few months they start getting pain in the opposite knee.
This catalogue of multiple, varied, and inconsistent symptoms can be very clearly attributed to changes in postural mechanics, and can be very easily understood. Ultimately the best thing to do is to prevent the problems by ensuring that good postural development is achieved in childhood, but if a deformity exists and is producing symptoms the problems can be best managed by attempting to improve posture insofar as it is possible despite the presence of deformed ligaments and bones. Other management methods involve avoiding constant postures which compound the effect, and include the interspersion of any activity with frequent periods of rest, and engaging in various activities which require frequent changes of posture so that the constant postural strain on any one area of the body is avoided. Notably all previous attempts to treat the condition with a pill, or with a singular treatment regime have failed, because it needs to be managed with more comprehensive and flexible methods. |