Thermal stress:
Thermal stresses are the result of sudden changes in temperature or air pressure. The most famous example of this is the draught. Everyone has either experienced or heard of someone who went to sleep with a fan or breeze blowing on them and woke in the morning with a stiff neck. This is the result of one side of the neck being chilled while the other stays warm. The muscle spasms on one side and pulls the vertebrae out of normal position and we all know that when the vertebra is out of normal alignment it causes nerve irritation resulting in problems. That’s a subluxation.
Another type of thermal stress is sudden changes in weather conditions like experienced in the spring and fall when the temperature can change dramatically during the course of one day. Also if during the summer you go from the cool air-conditioned office to the heat outdoors multiple times during the day. This sudden change in temperature is a big stress on the body. The opposite is also true in the winter with going from the hot, dry air inside to the cold, wet air outside.
Thermal stresses are the result of sudden changes in temperature or air pressure. The most famous example of this is the draught. Everyone has either experienced or heard of someone who went to sleep with a fan or breeze blowing on them and woke in the morning with a stiff neck. This is the result of one side of the neck being chilled while the other stays warm. The muscle spasms on one side and pulls the vertebrae out of normal position and we all know that when the vertebra is out of normal alignment it causes nerve irritation resulting in problems. That’s a subluxation.
Another type of thermal stress is sudden changes in weather conditions like experienced in the spring and fall when the temperature can change dramatically during the course of one day. Also if during the summer you go from the cool air-conditioned office to the heat outdoors multiple times during the day. This sudden change in temperature is a big stress on the body. The opposite is also true in the winter with going from the hot, dry air inside to the cold, wet air outside.