Archive for Adhesions

Treating Small Bowel Obstructions without Surgery: Video with Author Larry Wurn

By Amy Parker · February 21, 2010 · Filed in Adhesions, Bowel Obstruction · No Comments »

Clear Passage Therapies video on natural physical therapy treatment for small bowel obstruction: Larry Wurn, Co-Author of “Miracle Moms, Better Sex, Less Pain,” discusses opening small bowel obstructions non-surgically (Wurn Technique). One SBO patient also shares her story in the video. Visit clearpassage.com for more information on small bowel obstruction.

Miracle Moms eBook Chapters 2 and 3: How Adhesions Form in the Body’s Structure

By Amy Parker · November 30, 2009 · Filed in Adhesions, Featured · No Comments »

New Image
Download a free ebook of chapters 2 and 3, “How Adhesions Form in the Body’s Structure from “Miracle Moms.”

Includes the complete Foreword by Christiane Northrup, MD.

Click here to download.

(http://www.clearpassage.com/resources/ebook.php)

Adhesions Video: Co-Author Larry Wurn discusses treating adhesions non-surgically

By Amy Parker · November 23, 2009 · Filed in Adhesions, Featured · No Comments »

Larry Wurn, Co-Author of “Miracle Moms, Better Sex, Less Pain,” discusses manual therapy (Wurn Technique) to decrease pain and dysfunction due to adhesions and scars .

Live Interview with Dr. DeSilva, Health Radio

Listen to the live interview of Larry Wurn, Research Director, Clear Passage Therapies and co-author of Miracle Moms, with Dr. Derrick DeSilva, Jr. MD, host of Health Radio.

Click here to listen http://www.healthradio.net/archives/20091005/0941dd1b.mp3

Wurn talks with Dr. DeSilva about opening blocked fallopian tubes and treating adhesions causing small bowel obstructions, using the Wurn Technique, a nonsurgical manual physical therapy treatment.

Derrick DeSilva, Jr., MD

Derrick DeSilva, Jr., MD

“Derrick DeSilva Jr., M.D. has his own radio talk show called “Ask the Doctor” , which airs on WCTC Radio in New Jersey (1450 AM), as well as his own television show, “To Your Health”, which airs on News 12 New Jersey.” More at http://www.askdrdesilva.com/

Adhesions and Surgery: New Book, “Miracle Moms, Better Sex, Less Pain,” Examines Breaking the Endless Cycle of Pain

By Amy Parker · September 22, 2009 · Filed in Adhesions, Bowel Obstruction, News Releases · 2 Comments »

Post-surgical adhesions can cause chronic pain and dysfunction if left untreated.  In the new book ‘Miracle Moms, Better Sex, Less Pain,’ researchers examine a non-surgical therapy developed to treat adhesions.

Belinda Wurn, PT, treats a patient with her manual physical therapy for pelvic and abdominal adhesions

Belinda Wurn, PT, treats a patient with her manual physical therapy for pelvic and abdominal adhesions

Gainesville, FL  (PRWEB ) –Surgeries save lives, but they often create glue-like adhesions as the body heals from surgery. Post-surgical adhesions can cause pain and even life-threatening problems, such as bowels that become blocked and lose their function.

In the new book, ‘Miracle Moms, Better Sex, Less Pain,’ researchers examine a non-surgical therapy (Wurn Technique) that has decreased or eliminated adhesions in many patients, including abdominal adhesions and post- surgical adhesions.

Many pelvic and abdominal surgeries require repeat surgery – to remove the adhesions that formed from the earlier surgery. Abdominal adhesions occur in over 90% of patients after major abdominal surgery and pelvic adhesions occur in 55-100% of women who undergo pelvic surgery, according to a study in the journal ‘Digestive Surgery’ (2001). In a large study published in ‘Lancet’ (1999), over a third of patients who underwent major abdominal or pelvic surgery were re-hospitalized at least twice to treat adhesion related conditions.

The Wurn Technique® was created to treat the adhesions physical therapist Belinda Wurn developed after pelvic surgery. “I had double-over pain,” she said. “I could not work or stand up straight. It hurt to sit and even to breathe; the pain was always there.”

Wurn did not want to undergo a repeat surgery, knowing that more adhesions would likely form. Her husband, Larry Wurn, joined her in a search for a ‘hands-on’ answer. “We basically searched the world for an answer,” he said. “Each new piece we learned brought us that much closer to a cure.”

The Wurns have now published several studies on the manual physical therapy in peer-reviewed medical journals.

“Our biggest surprise was the variety of conditions that responded well to the therapy,” Belinda said. “Post-surgical pain patients responded well – then, we started seeing improvements in infertile women. When the therapy opened blocked fallopian tubes, we named our clinic Clear Passage Therapies.”

Studies in ‘Medscape General Medicine’ (2004) and ‘Fertility and Sterility’ (2006) showed that the therapy improved fertility and decreased or eliminated endometriosis and intercourse pain in most participants. In a study from ‘Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine’ (2008) the therapy opened blocked fallopian tubes in women who had been diagnosed infertile. Most had natural pregnancies after their tube(s) opened, and several had second natural pregnancies – indicating that the results of therapy lasted for years for some women.

‘Miracle Moms, Better Sex, Less Pain’ by Larry and Belinda Wurn with research gynecologist, Richard King, MD,  is available now at amazon.com.

Sexual Dysfunction Expert, Belinda Wurn, Speaks Out Against Painful Intercourse

By Amy Parker · August 31, 2009 · Filed in Adhesions, News Releases, Sexual Function · No Comments »
Belinda Wurn, PT, co-author of Miracle Moms, Better Sex, Less Pain

Belinda Wurn, PT, co-author of Miracle Moms, Better Sex, Less Pain

Sexual dysfunction and dyspareunia expert, Belinda Wurn, PT, discusses the prevalence of painful intercourse in women and what women and their physicians can do to better recognize and treat dyspareunia.

Gainesville, FL (PRWEB) – Over 70% of women surveyed in a large study in the ‘Journal of Family Practice (JFP)’ reported painful intercourse. Yet despite the high prevalence, women frequently do not discuss their sexual concerns with their physicians, according to the journal.

More than half of the women in the study also reported concerns of physical or sexual abuse, and over 40% reported sexual coercion at some point in their lives. “Experiences with abuse or coercion may explain why some women are hesitant to talk about their sexual concerns,” says physical therapist Belinda Wurn, an expert in treating the physical components of sexual dysfunction and dyspareunia.

Still, many other women with no history of abuse often conclude that painful intercourse is a normal occurrence for women and do not think to complain to their physician. They simply live with the pain or become disinterested in sex.

“When sex hurts, intercourse can become a time of silent agony instead of pleasure,” Wurn says. “Many women may attempt to avoid sex altogether due to the pain.”

Wurn should know. After a pelvic surgery and radiation for cancer of the cervix left her infertile and in pain, she searched for years to regain a pain-free sexual life. Now the tables are turned and she is conducting and publishing research on the work that got her out of pain.

The pelvic therapy she uses addresses a wholly physical component; it is designed to decrease vaginal and pelvic adhesions that form after trauma, infection, inflammation, or surgery. Untreated, adhesions can remain in the body for a lifetime where they act like glue, tightening tissues and causing pain.

Wurn’s findings have been published in several peer-reviewed medical journals, but “research is only one step in the right direction in helping women resolve their painful intercourse,” she says. “Healthcare professionals need to be stronger advocates and initiate conversations about sexual health with their patients. Sex should not hurt and women don’t have to live with it.”

“Women might want to keep a journal to assess their pain,” Wurn suggests. “They should note when the pain first started, how often it occurs, if it occurs at certain times during the monthly cycle or in certain coital positions, and if the pain occurs at the entrance or deeper within the vagina. Women should feel encouraged to discuss their journal with their gynecologist. If their doctor doesn’t listen, they should find another who will.”

Wurn and her husband recently co-authored  Miracle Moms, Better Sex, Less Pain, (available Septembr 15, 2009) to help bring these issues to the forefront of medical care.

To learn more about Belinda Wurn, PT, her manual physical therapy, or treating sexual pain and dysfunction, visit www.clearpassage.com

CONTACT: Amy B. Parker, 352-336-1433, amyb(@)clearpassage.com

Miracle Moms E-Book Chapter 17: Endometriosis Pain

By Amy Parker · August 14, 2009 · Filed in Adhesions, Endometriosis · 1 Comment »
(http://www.clearpassage.com/resources/ebook.php)

Endometriosis and adhesions

 

Download a free ebook of chapter 17, “Endometriosis Painfrom “Miracle Moms.”

Includes the complete Foreword by Christiane Northrup, MD.

Click here to download.

(http://www.clearpassage.com/resources/ebook.php)