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Understanding the Dyslexia SyndromeEncompassing 100's of symptoms and differently named but related disorder—including a highly reliably diagnostic "Self-Test" abstracted from Smart But Feeling Dumb — Revised Edition 2009, pages XV–XXI.
Unwittingly, many, so-called authorities have traditionally defined dyslexia in a manner similar to the way we must have viewed diabetes many years ago: as a comatose state. Now we all know that the number of mild and compensated diabetics far exceeds those who lapse into coma. And the same holds true for dyslexics. In clinical reality, the number of mild and reading-score-compensated dyslexics far exceeds those traditionally viewed as having the severe or “comatose” disorder characterized by reversals and severely impaired reading abilities and scores. To familiarize the reader with the many and varied symptoms characterizing dyslexia, as well as to provide crucial diagnostic insights, the following self-test is provided. Does your child, student, or patient have a learning problem? Is he or she smart but feeling dumb? Do you? If one or more of the following symptoms are evident, dyslexia may be present: Reading
Writing
Spelling, Math, Memory, and Grammar
Speech
Direction
Time
Concentration and Activity (ADD or ADHD)
Balance and CoordinationDifficulties with balance and coordination functions, e.g., walking, running, skipping, hopping, tying shoelaces, and buttoning buttons; accident proneness Phobias and Related Mental Disorders
Did you have academic problems or dyslexia as a child? Do you have phobias and related psychological and physical symptoms that have thus far defied a clear understanding and successful treatment?
If any of the above symptoms is present, your phobias and related emotional and physical disturbances may be due to the same inner-ear dysfunction as that which I have discovered to cause symptoms of dyslexia in children. As a result of a series of major medical breakthroughs or insights resulting from over three decades, of my research, dyslexia and its related neurotic and psychosomatic symptoms may now in most instances be successfully diagnosed and medically treated, And with treatment, the inevitable emotional scarring resulting from the dyslexic disorder and its wide-ranging symptomatic fallout can now be prevented or dramatically lessened, At the very least; complex, lengthy, and frustrating psychiatric, neurological, educational, optometric, auditory, and occupational therapies have been rendered significantly more successful—once a simple and safe medical treatment restores functioning within the inner ear and its supercomputer, the cerebellum, to more normal levels. Variations of DyslexiaMy research has shown that a dysfunctioning inner-ear/cerebellar system may also result in a wide range of dyslexia-related disorders, albeit called by different names, i.e., LD (poor learning), dysgraphia (poor writing), dyscalculia (poor math), dysphasia (poor speech), ADD or ADHD (poor concentration and attention), dyspraxia (poor coordination), anxiety and mood disorders (phobias, depression), Asperger syndrome (social dyslexia), pervasive developmental delay, and pseudoautism, as well as pseudomental retardation (severe forms of dyslexic or cerebellar-vestibular dysfunctioning), etc. As will be evident within this book, all these differently named disorders, including cerebellar ataxia, often respond favorably to inner-ear-enhancing medications and nutrients. Major Neurological Disorders and Dyslexia—Mixed Dyslexia.Even more surprising and important, a group of severe neurological disorders (i.e., mental retardation, Down’s syndrome, autism, cerebral palsy, brain injury due to trauma, tumors, surgery, or infections, mononucleuosis and Lymes disease and autoimmune disorders [multiple sclerosis], etc.) resulting from thinking brain and other noncerebellar-vestibular (CV) impairments were discovered in my research to frequently manifest dyslexia-related symptoms and thus CV dysfunctioning, These mixed-neurological cases, as I call them, can and do show improvements with CV-enhancing medical treatment, albeit the major disorder remains unchanged. A Simple ExplanationThe hundreds of diverse symptoms characterizing the dyslexic syndrome result when normal thinking brain and related nervous system processors experience secondary difficulties upon receiving scrambled signals from a dysfunctioning “inner-ear” or CV system. The quality and intensity of the symptoms are determined by (1) the specific CV signals scrambled and the degree of scrambling, (2) the normal brain centers receiving these scrambled signals, and (3) the brain's capacity for descrambling or compensation. In mixed-neurological disorders, the higher brain and other nervous system processors are primarily impaired and so experience even greater difficulties upon receiving scrambled “dyslexic” signals for interpretation and/or action. By analogy, medical and even nonmedical conditioning therapies help by decreasing signal-scrambling and increasing processing capacity, With this simple explanation, readers will easily be able to fully comprehend all the symptoms and variations characterizing all dyslexics, as well as their improvements via maturation, medical and nonmedical therapies, and even the medically triggered improvements in mixed dyslexia. Toward the dissemination of this unique, “therapeutically helpful” information and understanding—and the early implementation of new and invaluable lifesaving medical diagnostic/treatment methods for all dyslexics and all their signal-scrambling variations—Smart but Feeling Dumb was written.
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