Organique Vitality Physiotherapy

Organique Vitality Physiotherapy Integrative musculoskeletal physiotherapist that uses an holistic approach. Specialising in DNS

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01/03/2026

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🧩 The Pelvic Puzzle - Part 2: The Liver-Pelvis Connection – Why Congestion Above Creates Pain Below

In Part 1, we introduced the pelvis as your body's drainage basin; the lowest point where everything above eventually settles.

Now we examine the most powerful upstream influence on pelvic health: your liver.

Most people never connect what happens in their liver to what they feel in their pelvis. But once you see this connection, it explains more than any pelvic-focused treatment ever could.

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The Liver: Your Body's Master Filter

Your liver performs over 500 functions, but three are critical for pelvic health:

1. Blood Filtration

Your liver filters approximately 1.5 liters of blood every minute. It removes toxins, hormones, metabolic waste, and inflammatory compounds. Clean blood leaves the liver. Dirty blood recirculates.

When your liver is congested; overloaded by processed foods, seed oils, medications, or environmental toxins.. it cannot filter efficiently. Dirty blood continues circulating. And where does that dirty blood eventually pool? In the lowest point of your body: the pelvis.

2. Hormone Regulation

Your liver is responsible for clearing used hormones from your bloodstream. This includes estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone.

When your liver is sluggish, hormones recirculate instead of being eliminated. This creates a state called hormone dominance; particularly estrogen dominance, which directly affects pelvic organs.

Pelvic effects of hormone dominance:

· Fibroids
· Ovarian cysts
· Endometriosis
· Heavy or painful periods
· Prostate enlargement (in men)
· Pelvic congestion syndrome

3. Bile Production

Your liver produces bile to digest fats and carry toxins out of your body. Bile is your primary route of elimination for fat-soluble wastes; including excess hormones and inflammatory compounds.

When bile becomes thick and sluggish; from dehydration, poor diet, or liver congestion, those toxins never leave. They recirculate. And again, they eventually settle in the pelvis.

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The Portal Vein: A Direct Highway

Here is a detail most people never learn: Your liver and pelvis are connected by a direct vascular highway.

The portal vein carries blood from your digestive organs; including the lower gut, directly to your liver for processing. But when the liver is congested, pressure backs up into this vein. This is called portal hypertension, and it has direct pelvic consequences:

· Enlarged veins in the pelvic region (varicoceles in men, pelvic congestion in women)
· Hemorrhoids (varicose veins of the re**um)
· Slow drainage of inflammatory waste from pelvic tissues

The backup doesn't stop at the liver. It travels all the way down.

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What Pelvic Symptoms Reveal About Your Liver

Pelvic Symptom : What It May Reveal About Your Liver

Hemorrhoids: Portal vein pressure, sluggish bile

Fibroids or cysts : Estrogen dominance from poor liver clearance

Pelvic heaviness : Congested blood flow, poor filtration

Varicoceles (men) : Backed-up venous pressure from liver

Re**al irritation : Inflammatory compounds recirculating

Premenstrual pelvic pain : Liver struggling to clear hormones

Prostate issues : Hormone imbalance from sluggish liver

Your pelvis is not randomly malfunctioning. It is reporting on the state of your liver.

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The Joram Pattern (Revisited)

Remember Joram''s pelvic symptoms: re**al irritation, testicular discomfort, that "something moving" sensation. Standard pelvic exams found nothing.

But when we looked at his liver, we found:

· A diet high in processed foods (liver burden)
· Irregular meals (disrupted liver rhythm)
· Late nights (missed liver repair window)
· Dehydration (thick bile)

His liver was congested. That congestion created dirty blood and sluggish bile. The waste from that dirty blood settled in his pelvis. His pelvic symptoms were not the problem, they were the report from his liver.

When we supported his liver; warm water, early dinners, bitter greens, consistent rhythm, his pelvic symptoms gradually quieted. Not because we treated his pelvis, but because we cleared the congestion above it.

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The Female Connection: Hormones and the Liver

For women, the liver-pelvis connection is even more direct. Your liver clears estrogen from your bloodstream. When it's sluggish, estrogen recirculates.

This creates a feedback loop:

1. Estrogen dominance thickens the uterine lining and stimulates fibroid growth.
2. Congested pelvic tissues slow lymphatic drainage.
3. Stagnant lymph creates more inflammation.
4. Inflamed tissues produce more waste for the liver to clear.
5. The already-congested liver struggles further.

This is why women with fibroids, endometriosis, or heavy periods almost always have liver congestion. It's not coincidence. It's cause and effect.

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What Your Liver Is Asking For

Your liver doesn't need a "detox." It needs consistent, gentle support:

· Warm water upon waking (thins bile, supports filtration)
· Early dinners (by 6:30-7 PM) (gives liver overnight to work)
· Bitter greens (stimulate bile flow naturally)
· Stable fats (ghee, olive oil, coconut oil) (support liver membranes)
· No seed oils (reduce inflammatory load)
· Consistent meal times (liver loves rhythm)
· Sleep by 10 PM (liver's primary repair window)

When you support your liver, you are not just helping it filter toxins. You are draining the swamp that your pelvis has been sitting in.

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The Lesson

Your pelvic symptoms are not a mystery. They are not a shameful secret. They are a clear report from your body about the state of your liver.

· Hemorrhoids? Look at portal pressure.
· Fibroids? Look at estrogen clearance.
· Pelvic heaviness? Look at blood filtration.
· Prostate issues? Look at hormone regulation.

Stop treating the pelvis in isolation. Start supporting the liver above it. When the filter is clean, the water below runs clear.

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Next: In Part 3, we explore the other major upstream influence: "Men's Health: Testicular Pain, Prostate Issues, and the Gut Connection."

Mike Ndegwa | Natural Health Guide

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22/02/2026

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The image illustrates the foot tripod concept, a fundamental principle in clinical biomechanics describing optimal weight distribution across the plantar surface. The three primary load-bearing points include the calcaneus (heel), first metatarsal head, and fifth metatarsal head. When body weight is evenly distributed across this tripod, the foot maintains structural stability, efficient shock absorption, and proper alignment throughout the kinetic chain.

In the left image, the red markers suggest altered pressure distribution, where load may be unevenly transmitted through the forefoot and heel. This imbalance can collapse the medial longitudinal arch, increase plantar fascia strain, and contribute to excessive pronation. Over time, such dysfunction may lead to conditions like plantar fasciopathy, metatarsalgia, hallux valgus, and medial knee stress due to altered lower-limb mechanics.

The right image demonstrates a more optimal tripod alignment, where forces are evenly dispersed. This balanced loading supports the medial arch, enhances proprioceptive feedback, and allows the foot to function as both a flexible shock absorber during loading and a rigid lever during push-off. Proper tripod function also reduces compensatory stress transmitted to the ankle, knee, hip, and lumbar spine.

Clinically, restoring tripod loading is essential in rehabilitation and injury prevention. Strategies include intrinsic foot muscle strengthening, toe control training, short-foot exercises, appropriate footwear, orthotic support when necessary, and gait retraining. Improving ankle mobility and hip stability further enhances foot mechanics by ensuring proper load transfer through the kinetic chain.

Understanding the foot tripod principle helps clinicians identify abnormal pressure patterns and guide corrective interventions to improve posture, gait efficiency, and long-term musculoskeletal health.

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22/02/2026

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Breathing is not only a respiratory function but also a fundamental biomechanical process that supports spinal stability and postural control. The diaphragm, abdominal wall, pelvic floor, and deep spinal stabilizers work together to create a pressure-regulating system that stabilizes the trunk. The illustration highlights how diaphragmatic breathing distributes pressure evenly throughout the abdominal cavity, forming a supportive internal cylinder.

During proper inhalation, the diaphragm contracts and descends, increasing intra-abdominal pressure. Instead of the abdomen pushing forward only, pressure expands in all directions — anteriorly, laterally, and posteriorly — creating 360-degree expansion. The pelvic floor responds by lengthening slightly, while the transverse abdominis and oblique muscles regulate the expansion. This balanced pressure supports the lumbar spine and reduces excessive reliance on passive structures like ligaments and discs.

From a biomechanical standpoint, intra-abdominal pressure functions like an internal brace for the spine. When pressure is evenly distributed, it enhances trunk stiffness and stability without excessive muscular tension. This mechanism is crucial during lifting, walking, and athletic movements, as it improves force transfer between the upper and lower body while minimizing spinal strain.

The side-view illustration shows how pressure interacts with spinal alignment. With efficient diaphragmatic breathing, pressure supports the lumbar curve and maintains trunk integrity. In contrast, shallow chest breathing elevates the rib cage, limits diaphragm descent, and shifts stabilization demand to the neck, shoulders, and lower back. Over time, this inefficient pattern may contribute to neck tension, lumbar pain, and reduced core stability.

Poor pressure management can also overload the pelvic floor. If pressure is directed downward without coordinated muscular support, it may contribute to pelvic floor dysfunction. Conversely, excessive abdominal gripping without diaphragm coordination can increase spinal compression and restrict breathing efficiency.

Restoring optimal breathing mechanics involves retraining diaphragmatic function, improving rib cage mobility, and strengthening deep core musculature. When the diaphragm, abdominal wall, and pelvic floor coordinate effectively, the body gains a stable foundation for posture, movement, and injury prevention.

Efficient breathing creates a stable yet adaptable trunk, enhances movement efficiency, and supports long-term spinal health — demonstrating that proper respiration is essential not only for oxygen exchange but also for biomechanical integrity.

Feel free - DNS anywhere anytime Palya
26/08/2024

Feel free - DNS anywhere anytime
Palya

Enquire about the benefits of Visceral Manipulation for your body and your needs today.  Lynn's journey commenced 15 yea...
19/04/2024

Enquire about the benefits of Visceral Manipulation for your body and your needs today. Lynn's journey commenced 15 years ago and her passion for learning continues to grow as is her desire to help you to achieve your health goals.

19/04/2024

Come and join one of our intimate physiotherapy led exercise classes to learn to move optimally to prevent injury and improve your quality of life through movement therapy. It's the best way to stay accountable with your exercises which are designed to help you to feel much more functional.

Classes are run in Sunnybank at the following times:

Monday 10am
Tuesday 9.15am; 3.45pm, 6pm
Saturday 7.30am

Large group class Tuesday 5pm

Classes may be eligible for healthfund rebates.

Please enquire here for more information.
Look forward to seeing you there.

19/09/2022
19/09/2022

DNS Advanced Skills course in Newcastle. Boxing can help improve gait in a Parkinson’s patient

19/09/2022

An amazing three days with Marcela Šafářová taking our DNS skills to a whole new level . Thank you to all that contributed to make this course a superb learning experience.

02/09/2021

Congratulations Alberto Campbell-Staines! Great interview, such a wonderful attitude. The OVP Team are very proud of your achievements.

Address

Sunnybank, QLD
4109

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 6pm
Tuesday 9am - 7pm
Wednesday 9am - 6pm
Thursday 9am - 6pm
Saturday 7:30am - 11am

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