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Neural therapy is a German injection technique that uses local anesthetics (primarily procaine) injected into specific sites to normalize dysfunctional nerve function and break chronic pain cycles. The theory is that trauma, infection, or emotional stress can create persistent disruptions in the autonomic nervous system, and these "interference fields" perpetuate chronic pain and dysfunction.
By injecting procaine into scars, trigger points, ganglia, or other interference fields, neural therapy resets aberrant nerve signaling and restores normal autonomic function. Patients often report immediate and dramatic pain relief, sometimes resolving chronic conditions that have persisted for years. The effects can be temporary or, in some cases, permanently curative.
Neural therapy is widely practiced in Germany and other European countries for chronic pain, migraines, allergies, and various functional disorders. It requires a skilled practitioner who understands autonomic nervous system anatomy and can identify interference fields. When successful, the results can be remarkable and immediate.
Neural therapy has limited research in English-language medical literature but extensive clinical use in German-speaking countries for over 70 years. Evidence is primarily observational and clinical experience-based. When performed by trained physicians, it's very safe. Procaine is one of the safest local anesthetics with minimal systemic effects. Risks include rare allergic reactions and temporary pain at injection sites.
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