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  Home > Dyslexia Research Leads to New Medical Help for Major Neurological Disorders

Dyslexia Research Leads to New Medical Help for Major Neurological Disorders:

Mental Retardation, Cerebral Palsy, Brain Injury and Whiplash, Cerebellar Ataxia, Multiple Sclerosis, Pervasive Developmental Delays, Austism…

Boy ReadingGroundbreaking dyslexia research highlighted within Smart But Feeling Dumb by world-renowned neuropsychiatrist Dr. Harold Levinson demonstrates that a large number of major neurological processing disorders can now be helped by treating a co-existing but hidden signal scrambling “dyslexic” component of inner-ear/cerebellar origin

As a result of the examination and successful treatment of more than 35,000 patients over three decades, Dr. Levinson initially discovered that:

  • Dyslexia and related Learning, Attention Deficit and hundreds of related symptoms are due to the inability of normal thinking brain and related processors to adequately recognize, remember and react to scrambled signals received from a dysfunction within the inner-ear and its supercomputer — the cerebellum.
  • Most important, rapid and often dramatic improvements occur when utilizing simple and safe combinations of inner-ear-enhancing or “fine-tuning” medications and nutrients.

Fortunately, one discovery often leads to others.  By also recognizing that Dyslexia/ADD often co-exists with major processing impairments within the central nervous system, Dr. Levinson was led to successfully diagnose and treat the signal-scrambling inner-ear/cerebellar component frequently complicating such major neurological disorders as Mental Retardation, Cerebral Palsy, Brain Injury — even Whiplash, Multiple Sclerosis, Down Syndrome, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Delay…

Needless to say, the brains of individuals affected by major neurological processing impairments were able to compensate and function significantly better when receiving clear versus scrambled signals.

The often dramatic improvements possible are presented by Dr. Levinson and his patients within Smart But Feeling Dumb, Chapter XV entitled, Variations of Dyslexia — with Case Histories.

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