
MICROPHYSIOTHERAPY
Microphysiotherapy is a manual physiotherapy technique that aims to treat the cause of the disease and not just its symptoms. It is capable of identifying tissues that have lost their normal function and vitality after aggressive events to the body. Microphysiotherapy promotes the normalization and regulation of the affected body regions. Created by the Frenchmen Daniel Grosjean and Patrice Bénini, its development and formulation began in the 1980s, based on studies of embryology and also phylogenesis .
The technique consists of identifying the traces left by events that occurred and were not eliminated by the organism, which subsequently manifest themselves in different ways.
It is believed that each event, whether physical or psychological, leaves marks on the human body that can trigger pain and disease in other organs.
The physiotherapist uses micropalpation to search the patient's body for the location of the cellular scars (memories) that caused the symptoms. When the "traumas" are found, they are manually stimulated, with actions that simulate aggression and trigger the self-correction process, restoring the body's functions, eliminating diseases and promoting health.


