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What
is Syntonics?
Syntonics or optometric phototherapy, is the branch
of ocular science dealing with the application of selected
light frequencies through the eyes. It has been used
clinically for over 70 years in the field of optometry
with continued success in the treatment of visual dysfunctions,
including strabismus (eye turns), amblyopia (lazy eye),
focusing and convergence problems, learning disorders,
and the aftereffects of stress and trauma. In recent
years, Syntonics has been shown to be effective in the
treatment of brain injuries and emotional disorders.
SYNTONICS - the branch of ocular science
dealing with the application of selected visible light
frequencies through the eyes. Light is essential to
life. Our planet revolves around the sun and all life
on earth is sustained by sunlight. The Greeks were the
first to document the use of phototherapy. Currently
light is used on a variety of disorders from the "bili"
lights used on jaundiced newborns to the more recent
psychiatric use of while light for treatment of Seasonal
Affective Disorder. In optometry the use of phototherapy
to treat visual dysfunctions is called syntonics.
Interest in the effect of light on
the body intensified earlier this century. Most of the
current therapeutic techniques used in syntonics are
based on the work done by Dr. Harry Riley Spitler in
the 1920s and 1930s. Dr. Spitler, who had both optometric
and medical defrees, began researching and using phototherapy
in 1909. Spitler, the author of "The Syntonic Principle",
conceived the principles for a new science that he called
"Syntonics". Syntonics, from the word syntony
(to bring into balance), refers physiologically to a
balanced, integrated nervous system.
Certain biochemical conditions in the
brain need to be present before effective cortical plasticity
and new functions can occur. Neurotransmitters trigger
this biochemistry and allow for additional synoptic
connections to initiate movement and growth in new directions.
Colored light therapy can act as a powerful tool to
stimulate the biochemistry of the brain through the
visual system by way of the retinal-hypothalmus brain
connection.
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