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From YouTube: Focus On Health 02 22 2018
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A
A
Welcome
back
to
focus
on
health
now
I
know
you
couldn't
guess
that
I
know
you
couldn't
cuz.
You
know
I'm,
not
a
bonehead,
and
it's
not
Halloween,
but
to
my
right
right
here,
a
real
good
friend
of
mine,
dr.
Mohler
who's,
both
a
medical
doctor
by
the
way
and
a
Doctor
of
Dental
Surgery.
He
has
a
very,
very,
very
great
present
for
our
veterans
in
the
community
and
in
individuals
who
are
suffering
from
PTSD,
so
Don
on
what
you're
looking
to
this
camera
right
here
and
just
tell
them.
B
I
finished
dental
school
and
then
it
went
in
the
Army
for
about
20
years
and
then
I
also
went
to
medical
school
and
finished
a
medical
degree,
while
in
the
army,
I
was
an
oral
and
maxillofacial
surgeon
and
matter
of
fact,
I
was
chief
of
oral
surgery
at
Martin,
Army
Hospital.
Well,
I
was
there,
I
got
an
interest
in
PTSD
and
the
manifestations
of
it,
which
is
nightmares
and
continual
unexplained
headaches
and
people
that
can't
sleep
and
when
I
got
my
private
practice.
B
I
found
that
by
making
a
device
very
sad
I
did
it
all
myself
at
first
and
I
found
that
when
I
wore
this
thing
at
night,
my
nightmares
and
my
headaches
and
my
sleep
disruptions
disappeared
and,
as
a
result,
I
did
a
study.
It's
a
case
series
in
my
office.
People
would
come
in
and
I'd
ask
him
I
said:
well,
you
know,
how
are
you
doing?
Do
you
have
nightmares
or
headaches
have
trouble
sleeping?
These
are
common
things,
and
then
we
got
into
the
issue
of.
B
Do
you
think
you
might
have
had
a
traumatic
event
in
your
life?
It
doesn't
have
you,
don't
have
to
go
to
war,
to
have
PTSD
it's
a
common
misconception
and
you
can
have
it
as
a
result
of
sexual
trauma
or
a
friend
has
died,
a
very
close
friend,
unexpectedly,
traumatic
event,
any
traumatic
event,
and
then
I
realized
that
there
was
something
to
this,
that
these
people
were
grinding,
their
teeth
at
night
and
I.
B
Did
that
and
I
said,
wait
a
minute,
there's
connection
and
it's
it's
it's
revolutionary
and
it's
totally
unexpected
that
we
would
get
this
result
by
wearing
this
device,
which
looks
kind
of
like
a
basketball
football
mouthguard.
It's
very
specialized.
It's
gonna
be
able
to
stop
all
this
stuff
and
I
was
as
made
because
I'm
a
surgeon
and
I
normally
cut
things
to
make
them
better.
But
this
is
a
whole
new
venue
and
so
I
retired,
from
oral
surgery
about
six
months
ago
and
I
bought
an
office.
That's
strictly
used
for
the
treatment
of
PTSD.
A
Yes,
sir
and
say
here's,
this
is
what
I
like
about
done,
not
know
Don
by
the
way,
but
we've
been
friends
a
long
time.
It's
not
about
money
for
him,
it's
about
taking
care,
first
of
all
his
interest
in
vets,
because
he
is
a
vet
who
suffer
from
PTSD.
The
second
thing:
it's
about
helping
people
who
have
manifestations
of
post-traumatic
stress
disorder,
part
of
which
is
the
bruxism,
which
is
gratitude.
Now
what
I
want
you
to
do?
Don
I
want
you
to
take
this
here
and
just
explain
to
them.
A
B
Is
explaining
it?
The
thing
people
don't
understand
is
that
PTSD
is
not
just
a
disorder
of
the
mind.
The
mind
controls
the
body.
Ptsd
folks
have
high
blood
pressure.
They
can
have
increased
incidences
of
diabetes
and
other
medical
disorders
and
actually
have
a
shortened
lifespan.
So
one
of
the
manifestations
of
PTSD
is
the
fact
that
you
did
you
clenched
a
lot
when,
when
you're
asleep
at
night,
yes
and
the
muscles
people
don't
understand,
but
in
your
head
there's
a
big
muscle
here,
there's
about
eight
or
ten
at
least
muscles
of
mastication
into
your
food
right.
B
This
is
one
of
them.
So
when
you
feel
your
head
and
it's
kind
of
tender,
something
might
not
be
right
now.
Another
muscle
down
here
in
blue
is
the
masseter.
If
you
bite
together-
and
you
feel
that
muscle,
you
can
feel
your
leg
and
you
can
push
on
that,
it
doesn't
hurt.
When
you
push
here,
it's
a
little
tender
right.
You
can
push
behind
your
John,
it's
tender
that
would
be
here
and
then
their
muscles
inside
your
mouth,
that
you
probably
don't
want
to
try
that
right
now
with
a
dirty
finger.
B
But
when
the
when
you
visit
the
doctor,
he
can
he
can
feel
these
trigger
points
inside
your
mouth
right
and
when
you
have
nightmares-
and
you
have
headaches
when
you
get
up
in
the
morning
and
you
can't
sleep
and-
and
you
put
this
together-
this
is
an
aural
manifestation
of
this
disease.
Now
there
was
a
recent
book
called
stress
and
orality,
a
very
comprehensive
text
that
ties
us
all
together
when
you've
had
PTSD.
Your
brain
is
what
we
call
upregulated
and
they're.
B
The
nervous
system
is
on
edge
right
and
that
causes
the
trigeminal
nerve
and
we're
not
going
to
use
a
lot
of
big
words,
but
that's
the
nucleus.
It
controls
your
bite,
so
you
don't
break
your
teeth.
That
nucleus
is
upregulated,
and
so
you
are
always
straddling
clenching
right
and
that's
the
mechanism
for
why
this
this
kind
of
tones
that
down
cools
it
almost
at
all,
so
that
the
nightmares
and
headaches
go
away
now.
A
A
B
B
Yeah,
okay:
here
we
go,
we
take
a
mold
of
your
lower
jaw
and
then
we
make
a
model.
Then
in
my
office
it's
the
same
day
visit
we
fabricate
this
device.
It
looks
like
a
mouth
guard,
but
it's
not,
then
we
put
it
in
the
your
mouth
and
then,
when
you
bite
down,
see
it's
that
cushion.
Is
that
cushion
and
we
test
it
out
before
you
go.
A
Home
right
to
make
sure
it
see
so
and
that
that
right
there
releases
that
clenching
that
stress
that
you're
clinching
that
night,
that
you
don't
even
realize
that
you
do
exactly
that,
you
don't
even
realize
you're
doing
that's
causing
the
problem
and
the
muscles
and
all
they're
like
absolutely.
This
is
really
revving.
What
dr.
Mohler
has
here
is
really
really
really
revolutionary,
and
this
is
what
I
like
about
it's,
also
personal
with
him
him
being
a
PTSD,
suffer
a
veteran
and
wanting
to
make
a
difference.
So
much
in
fact
that
he
went
to
the
seminary.
A
This
is
that
this
is
a
mission
for
him.
It's
not
about
money,
it's
about
doing
something
from
its
heart,
spiritual,
so,
okay!
So
now
what
we're
going
to
do?
John
we're
going
to
jump
into
the
slides,
because
we've
got
a
lot
of
them,
and
so
let's
go
to
the
first
slide
now
all
I
want
you
to
do
is
just
to
describe
it's
a
lot
of
technical
terms,
but
to
break
that
down
just
into
layman's
terms
for
them.
Well,.
B
This
looks
like
a
mouth
guard
for
a
sports
event,
but
imagine
that
I
put
a
rock
in
your
shoe
to
make
you
limp
every
time
you
walk
divine
light
shoe
well
that
rock
is
a
rock,
but
it's
now
also
an
orthopedic
device.
That's
exactly
I
can
get
you
to
step
completely
different
than
you
would
my
fat
rock
wasn't.
B
B
A
A
Ptsd
is
a
complicated
disorder,
the
Dodgers
from
dsm-5,
which
says
previous
exposure
to
a
traumatic
event
that
actually
threatened
the
physical
integrity
of
the
individual,
or
was
so
perceived
by
the
person
and
evokes
a
response,
such
as
fear,
helplessness
or
Harlow.
That's,
basically,
what
PTSD
is:
let's
go
to
the
next
slide.
Please,
okay,
let's
go
to
the
part
where
says
I'm
on
Vietnam
War,
combat
veterans,
the
National
Institute
of
Mental
Health
indicates
that
20%
has
struggled
with
symptoms
of
PTSD
within
20
years
of
their
military
service.
A
A
A
Sexual
trauma,
that's
exactly
right!
Okay,
let's
go
to
the
next
slide.
Please,
okay!
Our
early
estimates
of
PTSD
among
Operation
Iraqi,
Freedom,
Operation,
Enduring
Freedom,
published
in
the
American
Journal
of
Psychiatry,
were
approximately
twelve
percent.
What
we're
doing
we
just
give
you
stats
military,
because
this
were
dr.
Mohler
seen
so
many
of
the
combat
vets
put
it.
We
could
also
give
you
statistics
of
everyday
citizens
who
were
involved
in
sexual
trauma,
motor
vehicle
accidents,
unforeseen
circumstances
in
life
that
cause
extreme
fear
and
trepidation
in
their
lives.
That's
true!
Next
slide.
B
A
B
Not
TMJ,
it
can
manifest
as
a
TMJ
symptom
from
the
incredible
stresses
that
you
put
on
your
jaw,
your
jaw
clenched,
yes,
and
what
this
device
does
it?
You
will
still
clench
your
teeth,
but
this
the
space
that
we
put
between
your
teeth
like
a
cushion
a
cushion
and
it
prevents
the
feedback,
the
pain,
feedback
based
feedback.
It.
B
B
The
clenching,
will
take
a
pleasant
dream
and
now
you
have
a
horrible
dream,
and
so
this
prevents
the
pain
or
we're
not
real
positive
of
the
neural
mechanism,
and
it
doesn't
matter
because
it's
established
that
it
is
a
neural
mechanism.
We
can't
explain
exactly
why
it
does
it,
but
it
absolutely
doesn't
yeah.
A
That
what
is
so
significant
is
that
when
you're
asleep
you're
completely
unaware
that
you
are
causing
that
nightmare
because
of
your
clenching
of
your
teeth
and
the
pressure
and
the
pain
through
your
temporal
mandibular
area,
yes,
you're
you're
inadvertently
are
changing
your
your
dreams
into
nightmares.
Yes,.
C
A
C
A
That's
basically,
that's
the
that's
mechanism
that
we're
trying
to
describe
to
you
right
now
that
this
oral
device
in
your
mouth
and
you're
gonna
see
it
a
little
bit
on
the
screen
does
go
to
the
next
slide.
Please,
okay!
Here's
the
I'd
like
to
discuss
the
the
statistics,
because
mathematics
is
only
pure
science
participants.
A
Participants
in
this
study
and
76
were
limited
to
patients
with
PTSD
diagnosis
had
been
established
for
a
minimum
of
three
years
by
clinicians
and
I,
the
US
Army
or
the
Veterans
Administration,
and
who
had
no
recent
changes
with
respect
to
headaches,
nightmares
or
disorders
of
initiating
and
maintaining
sleep
next
slide.
Please
can
I
comment
on.
B
A
B
B
B
A
So
all
it's
all
of
these
things
combined,
but
this
is
a
vital
part
of
it.
Absolutely
let's
go
to
the
next
slide,
explain
this!
Well,
you
see
it's
equal
among
males
and
females.
Yeah
speech,
post-traumatic
stress
disorder.
You
is
not
determined
it
by
set!
No
sir
okay
next
slide.
Please
explain
this
here.
B
B
A
A
B
A
B
A
B
A
B
B
B
A
So
it's
really
it's
really
significant
that
this
device,
because
that
lessens
that
sensation
to
actual
physical
exertion
to
the
temporal
mandibular
muscles,
causing
a
pain
that
this
device
look
at
it
look
at
the
aperture.
Yes,
there's
something
like
this
here
could
could
lessen
the
symptoms
of
PTSD
we're
going
to
stop
for
a
minute
right
here.
We're
gonna
go
to
a
commercial,
come
back
with
the
rest
of
this
good
information.
Righty
see
you
on
the
other
end
of
the
commercial.
D
Just
remember
the
rules
of
the
road
when
you're
out
enjoying
a
bike
ride
and
motorists
when
you're
sharing
the
road
with
cyclists,
use
caution
and
give
at
least
three
feet
when
passing
bicycles
are
safe,
fun
and
sensible.
When
you
ride,
be
visible,
be
predictable
and
be
alert,
you'll
have
a
safe
ride
and
a
great
time.
Let's
get
there
together,
Georgia
a
message
from
the
governor's
office
of
Highway,
Safety
and
Georgia
bikes.
I
am
a
teenager.
I
am
online
I,
enjoy
sharing
thoughts,
music.
A
Welcome
back
to
focus
on
house
we're
here
with
dr.
Mohler,
dr.
Bona.
Now
what
I
want
you
to
do?
I
want
you
before
we
go
on
him,
which
is
good
information
once
your
look
into
the
screen
and
give
all
your
contact
information,
how
people
can
contact
you
if
they
want
relief
from
PTSD,
so
you
look
right
into
that
screen
itself.
We.
B
Are
in
Rosemont
like
little
medical
complex
on
Rosemont
Drive,
it's
three
nine
one,
six
Rosemont
and
our
telephone
number
is
706.
Three,
two
three
one,
eight
five,
two,
seven,
oh
six,
three,
two,
three
one,
eight
five,
two
and
when
you
come
in
more
than
likely,
you
will
be
the
only
person
in
the
office.
No
one
knows
that
you're
there
for
PTSD,
it's
a
very
sad,
a
confidential,
very
confidential
area.
It's
not
high-traffic
area
and
you
come
in.
There's
not
gonna,
be
any
pokey
blood
drawn
anything
like
that.
B
It's
not
necessary
and
you're
just
gonna
be
filling
out
some
basic
information.
We
take
a
mold
of
your
mouth.
Then,
while
you're
completing
your
information,
then
I
may
actually
make
the
device
the
neuromodulator,
and
then
we
test
fly
it
for
about
half
an
hour
before
you
leave
it's
easy.
Yes,
there's
no
pain
and
I
need
to
tell
you
that
it's
a
money-back
guarantee
and
I'm
only
doing
this
to
make
sure
that
there's
really
no
reason
you
can't
come
in
get
one
with
a
charge.
A
B
A
B
These
these
are
exciting
logistics.
This,
the
next
slides,
are
going
to
show
that
we
have
treated
tough
patients.
This
is
a
pain
scale
and
it's
used
it's
a
standard
pain
scale.
If,
if
folks
take
this
and
want
to
freeze
frame
it,
you
can
look
it
up,
but
it
shows
on
the
right
side
the
number
those
are
high
scores
for
pain.
Those
are
significant.
Those
are
life-altering
pain,
scores
that
say,
hey
I
got
a
headache.
I
can't
work
right,
I'm
feeling
bad.
B
So
that's
what
that
sly
said
is
that
with
our
customers
that
their
patients
are,
we
really
affect
it.
We're
really
affected
these
we're
not
easy
cases,
let's
go
to
the
next
slide.
Now
this
is
the
duration
of
symptoms
in
PTSD.
The
symptoms
can
go
on
for
years
and
years
and
years,
but
if
you
treat
someone
PTSD
that
say,
I've
had
it
for
a
month
or
two
well,
you
may
get
spontaneous
resolution,
but
all
these
cases,
if
you
know,
if
you
look
at
the
numbers
on
the
bottom,
it
says
those
are
years.
B
B
Per
week,
this
shows
you
there's
people
that
have
three
four
and
five.
Those
are
the
numbers.
This
is
a
breakdown
of
statistics
and
it's
the
same
percentages
in
the
400
patients
that
I've
treated
but
look
over
there
on
the
ones
that
have
almost
seven
headaches
a
week
or
hesitations.
Don't
that
these
people
are
hurting
they're.
A
B
Thank
a
professor
at
the
Medical
College
of
Georgia,
where
I
used
to
be
a
professor.
He
said
use
this.
We
call
them
inventories,
and
this
inventory
shows
the
number
of
disturbing
dreams
in
nightmare.
So
you
can
see
that
these
folks
are
having
nightmares
between
three
to
seven
times
a
week
when
they
go
to
sleep.
B
A
B
A
B
Is
correct
next
slide
now
this
is
the
one
I
love
nightmare
improvement,
gone
forty-nine!
That's
massive!
That's
awesome!
That
yeah
and-
and
this
is
the
patients
telling
us
they're
gone,
you
know
when
you
have
nightmares,
I
know
and
they're
and
they're
very
dramatic
nightmares.
You
feel
you're
back
in
the
war
zone,
the
rest
of
them.
What
improve?
Just
like
better
than
eighty
percent,
much
improved
and
very
much
improved.
You
can
see.
A
B
A
B
A
B
A
So
to
next
slide,
please,
okay,
explain
it
yeah!
This
is
obvious:
bruxism
gentle
pain
and
induces
masticatory
emotional
pain.
What
this
is
saying
is
exactly
what
we
explain
before
when
you're
sleeping
and
you're
clenching
your
teeth.
It
causes
a
pain
in
the
temporal
mandibular
area
that
you're
completely
unaware
of
while
you're
sleeping,
which
causes
you
to
have
nightmares,
lose
sleep
toss
and
turn,
and
all
the
other
symptoms
that
you
experience.
A
What
I
like
about
this
here
says
the
increased
crease
sprint
material
may
act
as
a
cushion
to
alleviate
all
of
that
discomfort
by
promoting
muscle
relaxation,
which
may
contribute
to
reduced
frequency,
and/or
intensity
of
headaches.
The
effect
is
probable
behavior
that
is
unconscious.
So
your
unconscious
doing
all
these
things,
and
it
split
just
some
lessons.
All
of
that
next
slide,
please.
A
A
B
The
main
thing
is
that
if
you
and
that
when
we
showed
you
the
skull
and
where
it
hurt,
when
you
feel
up
here,
you
feel
behind
your
jaw.
If
that's
tender
unhear,
and
you
feel
your
mass
that
are
right
here,
especially
if
you
bite
down
and
you
can
actually
feel
it,
you
can
feel
that
you
actually
feel
that
muscle
and
then,
if
they're
tender,
there's
a
high
probability
and
you're
having
headaches.
There's
a
high
probability.
There's.
A
A
correlation
yes-
and
this
is
something
would
you
spray?
This
is
important
to
dr.
Mohler.
Would
you
explain
this
is
very
important?
Can
we
have
a
shot
on
dr.
Mohler
by
the
way?
Can
we
do
that
now
explain
that
again
to
the
people,
because
they
about
the
they
need
to
check,
because
that's
extremely
important
start.
B
Push
like
on
your
stomach
that
doesn't
hurt.
You
can
push
quite
hard
when
you're
pushing
here
and
you
rubbing
around
and
you
feeling
this
tender
soreness
right.
That's
not
supposed
to
be
that
way
and
then
there's
certain
exquisitely
air
tender
areas
behind
here.
You
may
have
tenderness
behind
your
neck
or
on
your
shoulders.
Some,
you
may
have
be
tender
right
in
here.
A
And
that's
what
a
lot
of
people
don't
know
we're
going
to
take
a
break
and
we're
going
to
come
back.
To
sum
all
this
up
right
after
this
next
commercial.
C
The
Volunteer
Coordinator
here
at
Columbus,
Animal,
Care
and
Control,
and
we
would
love
to
have
you
come
and
help
make
a
difference.
If
you're
interested
in
volunteering,
please
call
me
at
seven
zero,
six,
two,
two
five,
four,
six,
six,
six
or
email
me
at
animal
control
at
Columbus,
GA
door.
Welcome.
A
Back
to
focus
on
health
and
I
want
to
thank
you,
because
it's
the
after-effects
of
the
flu
I'm
not
contagious,
but
I've
got
that
lingering
call
dr.
moment,
look
right
in
here
and
tell
them
first
of
all
how
they
can
get
in
touch
with
you
when
they
can
call
you
I
know
you
do
it
by
appointment,
because
this
is
your
special
application,
you're,
not
about
making
money
about
helping
people
so
give
them
I
want
you
to
do
it
twice
into
this
camera,
how
they
can
get
in
touch
with.
B
You
my
telephone
number,
is
706
three,
two,
three
one,
eight
five,
two,
seven,
oh
six,
three,
two,
three
one,
eight
five,
two!
It's
in
Rosemont
on
Rosemont,
Drive,
three,
nine
one,
six
small
office.
There
are
two
oak
trees
all
around
the
parking
lot.
You'll
feel
welcome.
When
you
come,
we
scheduled
your
appointment
when
you
call
just
for
you.
We
do
not
I
have
a
lot
of
other
things
that
I'm
doing
so
when
you
call
we
will
work.
A
B
B
B
A
A
A
And
unrecognized
bruxism.
That
was
what
we
would
explain
to
you
before.
Other
people
don't
even
know
that
that
they
are
predisposed
to
have
this,
but
because
of
the
the
tenderness
and
they
don't
really
examine
themselves
next
slide,
please,
okay,
what
this
is
saying
that
there
were
therapeutic
effects
produced
by
the
slide.
It
was
improved.
Sleep
quality
asleep
were
noted
by
self-report
at
varying
times
throughout
the
study.
So
these
effects
reverse
when
used
when
you
so
the
Sprint
was
discontinued,
which
is
what
dr.
Muller
was
saying.
You
had
this
you've
got.
B
A
A
You
came
out
and
you
did
oral
surgery
at
your
at
your
practice
for
how
many
years
24
for
20
years
and
just
like
with
me
when,
when
a
good
Lord
tapped
me
on
the
shoulder
and
said,
stop
making
the
money
at
the
Medical,
Center
and
and
and
and
like
and
just
start
focusing
in
on
using
your
skills,
your
education
and
your
experience
to
help
people
in
the
community
the
ways
of
God
they
they
sell.
What
is
this
thing
in
the
scripture
says
that
the
foolishness
of
God
is
greater
than
the
wisdom
of
man.
A
Yes,
and
when
I
told
my
wife,
I
was
gonna,
stop
working
and
start
doing
free.
She
said
what
but
she's
a
good
woman
and
she
and
she
stood
by
me
and
look
where
I'm
at
today.
Look
how
many
people
I've
helped
you
he's
in
the
same
position
in
his
life
right
now,
where
the
only
thing
he
wants
to
do
is
what
the
Lord
is
directing
them
to
do
your
friend
Don.
Thank
you,
sir.
A
B
A
Mohler
god
Noah
thought
I
want
to.
Thank
you
thanks,
sir.
Thank
you
for
coming
in
for
all
of
you
there,
as
always
I
love
doing
this
program.
It's
it's.
This
is
my
one
of
my
particular
missions
like
to
thank
mr.
mr.
Mike.
King
are
really
really
there.
Mr.
Bruce
Lee
is
an
assistant
and
the
government
of
the
CCG
government
for
allowing
this
program
to
go
out
to
the
community
and
educate
individuals
on
health.
It's
a
real
blessing
for
me
and
I
will
see
all
of
you
again
next
month.
God
bless
you.