Fascia: What has happened in the last 10 years of anatomical research?
In 2015 veterinary Vibeke S Elbrønd published the first report on Fascia and horses. To make that happen she had to learn all there was regarding fascia, she had to become a fascia expert. When meeting her in Copenhagen in February The Fascia Guide asked this expert: What has happened in the last 10 years of anatomical research. The answer became this animation.
De Humani Corporis Fabrica – Fascia as the Fabric of the body
In this essay the author will also have to address the matter of How to Define Fascia. He will approach the issue from the two domains of science he stands for: anatomy and embryology. And he will do so applying the phenomenological approach which he has been able to learn during his decennia long experience as a teacher in dynamic morphology and embryology.
The Architecture of the Connective Tissue in the Musculoskeletal System—An Often Overlooked Functional Parameter as to Proprioception in the Locomotor Apparatus
The architecture of the connective tissue, in- cluding structures such as fasciae, sheaths, and membranes, is more important for understand- ing functional meaning than is more traditional anatomy, whose anatomical dissection method neglects and denies the continuity of the connective tissue as integrating matrix of the body.
BiotensegriTea Party 1.9: Scars, Adhesions and the Biotensegral Body from Handspring Publishing
Scars, Adhesions and the Biotensegral Body from Handspring Publishing.
Editors Jan Trewartha and Sharon Wheeler and their contributors Joanne Avison, Leonid Blyum, Graham Scarr, John Sharkey for a panel discussion, which John has agreed to moderate.
BiotensegriTea Party 2.3 Dr Gerald Pollack, EZ water and Fascia
Dr. Niall Galloway welcomes Dr.Gerald Pollack to the BiotensegriTea Party.
Dr. Pollack maintains an active laboratory at the University of Washington in Seattle, and is the Founding Editor-in-Chief of WATER: A Multidisciplinary Research Journal; Executive Director of the Institute for Venture Science; co-founder of 4th-Phase Inc.; and founder of the Annual Conference on the Physics, Chemistry, and Biology of Water. He has received numerous honors including:Tthe Prigogine Medal for Thermodynamics; the University of Washington Annual Faculty Lecturer; the NIH Director’s Transformative Research Award; and the 1st Emoto Peace Prize, and is the author of The Fourth Phase of Water and Cells, Gels and the Engines of Life.
The Heart Dance
In this clip, Gil Hedley shares a movement sequence designed to give a kinesthetic sense of the general flow of blood through the heart center. For more info on Gil’s class schedule