Dysautonomia: A Clinical Map for Practitioners Beyond POTS
Dysautonomia is an umbrella, not a diagnosis. Knowing which autonomic subsystem is failing — and how they interact — is what separates guessing from treating.
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Dysautonomia is an umbrella, not a diagnosis. Knowing which autonomic subsystem is failing — and how they interact — is what separates guessing from treating.
Most palpitations are benign — but they always mean something. Decoding them requires knowing whether you are looking at sympathetic surge, vagally-mediated ectopy, or anxiety amplification of normal sensation.
Hypermobility, dysautonomia, and mast cell activation are not three coincidences. They cluster for biological reasons — and once you see the pattern, the treatment sequence becomes obvious.
Chronic dizziness is rarely an inner-ear problem. In most cases it is a circulation problem — cerebral hypoperfusion driven by autonomic dysregulation. The fix is upstream of the symptom.