3.  Visceral Therapy

Visceral therapy is the combination of the musculoskeletal system with the organ system. Our organs are attached to the musculoskeletal system and thus get their hold and their place in the body.
They therefore have a strong connection to the spine, pelvis, ribs, pectoral girdle, bones, muscles and fascia.

For many reasons it can lead to dysfunctions of the organs: Infections, operations, poor nutrition, poor posture, scoliosis or emotional stress. The consequence of this is that the stressed organs build up tension and then transfer it to the musculoskeletal system. For example, constipation or cystitis can lead to symptoms at the hip joint or the lumbar spine (pain, intervertebral disc problems, listhesis,...).

Treatment concept and objective of visceral therapy:
Anamnesis - Medical diagnosis - Sector treatment - Lesion chain

The integrative manual treatment concept of visceral therapy finds its basis in a well-founded anamnesis of the patient, which is verified by a medical diagnosis and has its jective to treat the lesion chain. This consists of contiguous sectors and is treated by means of a targeted treatment process based on anatomical, topographical, physiological/functional, sympathetic and parasympathetic contexts.