Niromathe principles

Niromathe principles

Osteopathy comes from the depths of time.

The Niromathé Method has its origin to the outmost reach of Europe and India.

Eugene Renard, a bonesetter from Pas de Calais, was practicing a method that he learned from his cousin who learned it himself in the Balkans. There, most of the bonesetters worked the same way: they were ‘setting back’ the nerves, tendons, and ligaments. They ‘kneaded’ lax tissues. They made lymph and energy, pulsate again. What they had in common were the gentleness of their techniques, the superficial mobilisation of the skin, and no strong manipulations, like ‘cracking bones’. After 10 minutes, their patients were ‘miraculously’ healed, thanks to their methods.

Some of these bonesetters had huge reputations; they were internationally well-known.

Created in 1997, the Niromathé® method was a true revelation and the beginning of a fascinating activity. The Niromathé® method is easy, soft, painless, for everybody (from the infant to the elderly), quick (10 minutes), practical, and very efficient with immediate results.

A large number of osteopathic techniques aim to stimulate trigger points: the techniques of Dicke, Knap, Chapman, Goodheart, Vogler, Moneyron, Bowen and others, and also acupuncture (Ah-Shi points). The Niromathé® method is unique: it associates traction of the skin while stimulating these points. It is much like Janet Travel’s techniques, which were combining xylocaine injections on these points with muscle traction.

Everything happens at the level of the skin.

While the osteopathic lesion is being formed, cutaneous and subcutaneous points are being ‘deprogrammed’.
This state can last for years. The reorganization of these points by a short, quick, and polarized cutaneous vibrations leads consequently to the disappearance of these osteopathic lesions.

These are the principles of the Niromathé® method:

A simple contact with the skin attenuates a symptomatology.
A superficial and vibratory contact is more efficient.
A polarized contact (2 hands on the body) ameliorates the result.
A precise and localized contact on the key points of the tendons and ligaments, close to the joints, enhances the manipulation.
A simultaneous work of the receptive hand clearly improves the manipulation.