Saturday, May 10, 2014

NEUROTAGS! YOU'RE IT!




OLDER POSTS IN THIS SERIES

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Earlier I posted "Is manual therapy even necessary?" Probably not, in the long run... However, it has a place in the short run. This blog series is an exploration of that.

Yesterday I quickly scratched down thoughts with supporting evidence, and listed them in a blogpost here. The plan is to flesh out these ideas a bit better, in this blog series.

The first point is about neurotags.
I wrote,

"1. The brain, once a neurotag has arisen and become easily triggered, can't go back to being a brain that never had that neurotag. (I think of a neurotag as a tangled mess of enhanced firing, sort of like a positive feedback loop but more of a birds' nest than a simple loop)"

So, let's discuss neurotags first.

What is a neurotag?
A neurotag is a "pattern of neuron activation which creates a certain output of the brain, such as a perception, thought, movement or immune system response."(1)
".. when someone mentions a slipped disc, and you activate your neurotag for “slipped disc” to think about it, you also activate some of the member cells for your back pain neurotag.  Therefore thinking about a slipped disc will lower the threshold for activation of your back pain neurotag.  Get it?  Reread if necessary! This is a very simple explanation for why pain can be modified by so many different inputs."

SOURCE: Zac Cupples (3)

Construction of a neurotag is perfectly normal brain behaviour. It's not about your brain being defiant or evil or mean to you. It's how brains remember what they have learned - they build associations. Synapses are involved. Enhanced signalling is involved. Glia are involved, along with 250,000,000 synaptic proteins that turn over every few days (4). Imagine that.
When I think of a pain neurotag, I think of a cobweb gathering dust. I also remember the ant swarm that got stuck in a positive feedback loop around the base of a tree, and couldn't break free (5). I think of Erik Meira's post (6) about positive feedback loops, Getting Rid of SomethingPositive.
"Remember "positive" does not mean "good" when we talk science. It means "additive".


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1. Review of Moseley/Hodges Talk Part Two Todd Hargrove, BetterMovement.org blog, Oct21/2012
2. What is a Neuromatrix? David Butler, Neuromatrix Training blog, Jan22/2008
3. Graded Motor Imagery, Zac Cupples, April 24/2013
4. The Remarkable Neuron: Erin Schuman at TEDxCaltech, youtube video 14:30, Feb8/2013
5. The Ants go Marching One by One... Diane Jacobs, HumanAntiGravitySuit blog, April30/2014
6. Getting Rid of Something Positive Erik Meira, The PT Podcast blog, April9/2014

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