Spinal etiology is an emerging discipline that examines the range of conditions that arise from damage to the spinal cord, peripheral nerves, blood vessels and visceral nerves. Spinal abnormalities not only cause neck, shoulder and back pain, lumbar, hip and leg pain, numbness and paralysis of the limbs, but also affect the function of respiratory, digestive, circulatory, urinary and endocrine systems by affecting the blood vessels near the spine and the nerves that manage the internal organs, manifesting various complex symptoms such as: headache, dizziness, tinnitus, lack of blood supply to the brain, memory loss, loss of vision, eye pain, abnormal blood pressure, chest tightness and shortness of breath, asthma Stomach pain, gastric distension, abdominal pain, diarrhea, constipation, dysmenorrhea, menstrual disorders… In some people, many of these symptoms can even exist at the same time, and after repeated visits to various departments of the hospital and numerous examinations and various laboratory tests, it is still difficult to diagnose and treat them. The relationship between the above-mentioned diseases and the spine has attracted the attention of the medical community in various countries in the past 20 years. For example, many scholars in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, France, Japan and other countries, including China, have conducted systematic research on the relationship between the above-mentioned diseases and the spine, and found that there are more than 70 diseases related to spinal abnormalities. When the bones, joints, intervertebral discs and peri-vertebral soft tissues of the cervical, thoracic, lumbar and sacral vertebrae suffer acute injury, vertebral joint dislocation and soft tissue injury occur simultaneously, while chronic strain or degenerative changes in the spine occur at a certain age and under the long-term action of certain pathological factors. By the time intervertebral instability occurs, if the body can still compensate, there may be occasional clinical intolerance to strain or mild pain. At this time, only self activity, changing position or acupuncture and physiotherapy will make the symptoms disappear, and this is called the period of spinal joint dysfunction (the early stage of instability). In this period, we must pay attention to self-protection and appropriate treatment, otherwise, let the spinal instability continue to exist, development, under the action of certain causes, will occur intervertebral joint dislocation (displacement), disc bulge (protrusion), ligament calcification and osteophytes, these lesions will directly or indirectly on the nerve roots, intervertebral arteries (static), spinal cord and sympathetic nerves (preganglionic fibers, paravertebral nodes) to produce These lesions will directly or indirectly irritate or compress the nerve roots, intervertebral arteries, spinal cord and sympathetic nerves (preganglionic fibers, paravertebral segments) and cause various clinical disorders. Research has proven that the cause of many chronic and difficult clinical conditions of unknown origin originates from the spine, such as neurosis (insomnia, irritability, excessive sweating, anorexia, fatigue, etc.), dizziness and headache, vertigo (brain dysfunction caused by insufficient blood supply to the vertebrobasilar artery), migraine, trigeminal neuralgia, upper limb joint and muscle pain, frozen shoulder, and unexplained chest tightness, palpitations (supraventricular tachycardia) and intractable The cervical spine syndrome has been associated with the thoracic spine disease (thoracic spine syndrome). The scope of thoracic spondylosis (thoracic spine syndrome) is much broader. The lower sympathetic nerve center is in the lateral horn of the thoracic medulla, and its preganglionic fibers are damaged by misalignment of the intervertebral joints as they pass through the intervertebral foramen. The damage varies with the damaged segment and leads to corresponding visceral dysfunction. For example, T1~5 intervertebral subluxation can lead to frequent premature contractions (ventricular, atrial, and multi-origin), atrioventricular block, and coronary artery spasm (the results of animal experiments with four different designs in relevant research institutes proved that artificial subluxation of T1~5 thoracic vertebrae can make experimental animals with normal electrocardiograms develop and develop into animal models of coronary heart disease, which can eventually progress to sudden death due to myocardial infarction), therefore, we believe that spinal etiology is also one of the causes of coronary heart disease and is one of the triggers of angina pectoris in people with existing coronary heart disease. Lumbosacral intervertebral subluxation, in addition to lumbar and leg pain, can also lead to intestinal spasm, intestinal paralysis, intestinal dysfunction, habitual constipation, urinary dysfunction, impotence and dysmenorrhea. This shows that caring for health and taking care of the spine not only greatly reduces the incidence of neck, shoulder, back and leg pain, but also reduces the occurrence of spine-related diseases. Under the guidance of the theory of spinal etiology, our department has carried out chiropractic treatment with orthopedic massage, small acupuncture and water acupuncture as the main treatments, and has so far summarized more than 60 indications and achieved good results.