Originally posted by skevimc
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Once I asked to a surgeon the following question: imagine somebody sitting down in a straight position in a bench with her back touching the wall. If her neck would be tied (not so strong) to the wall, and he abruptly dies, her torso could not move to the front, neither to the sides. But it would not collapsed either, it’ll remains straight and not because the muscles of course. How could it be? He said me that without any doubt because the vertebrae bodies (vertebrae + disc), if they were not wedges. Unlike other surgeons I visited, he thought that much more important than muscles are the vertebrae bodies.
ABR people says that internal organs, fascias, smooth muscles.. all of that they call the pneumatic skeleton are much more important than the spine and striated muscles.
Really i don’t know what to think.
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