Kinesiology, also called muscle testing, is a method used by a wide variety of practitioners to help identify the best foods, supplements and therapies for patients on an individualized basis.
Have you ever visited an osteopathic doctor (DO), chiropractor, biological dentist or another type of practitioner within the alternative health community?
If so, you may have experienced the holistic protocol known as kinesiology.
What is Kinesiology?
Kinesiology or biomechanics at its most basic level is the study of body movement.
When used as a method of diagnosis and treatment, however, the appropriate term is applied kinesiology (AK) or muscle testing.
Applied kinesiology was developed in 1964 by George Goodheart, Jr., a Michigan chiropractor.
Not all alternative health practitioners are trained in applied kinesiology.
They must first be certified in their respective fields. Then, they can study applied kinesiology in a postgraduate setting for use in their practice.
Kinesiology as used within an alternative medical setting is based on the premise that muscles are affected by problems within a particular organ or body system.
Muscle weakness can be symptomatic of problems elsewhere in the body. Examples include nerve damage, reduced blood supply, chemical imbalances, and/or nutritional deficiency among others.
My first experience with kinesiology was in my late twenties.
I was suffering panic attacks from my crazy, “burn the candle at both ends” corporate lifestyle at the time.
My practitioner used a basic muscle test to determine if a pancreatic enzyme supplement would work for me.
As part of the test, I held one of the pancreatic enzymes in my mouth. At the same time, the doctor tested for muscle weakness.
As it turned out, no weakness was noted. Hence, I was recommended to take that supplement in conjunction with other healing therapies.
How “Muscle Testing” Works
Kinesiology is very safe and does not involve invasive procedures.
A detailed medical history is taken before any muscle testing is performed.
In other words, AK is not an appropriate technique on its own to diagnose or treat disease.
Rather, this method should only be used as one part of a thorough and complete diagnostic examination according to the International College of Applied Kinesiology.
It is a simple tool to allow the practitioner to reveal which holistic treatment options are optimal for each patient. This ensures the most rapid and complete healing possible.
When a person is being muscle tested, the practitioner will have the patient stand or lie down.
The patient’s arms and sometimes legs are then moved in different positions. At the same time, light, manual pressure is applied to test muscle response to a specific set of stimuli.
Throughout the entire procedure, the patient remains relaxed and comfortable.
If muscle weakness is detected to one specific stimulus but not another, then the practitioner knows by process of elimination what is the best option.
Kinesiology in Dentistry
If you’ve ever visited a biological dentist, you’ve probably noted that kinesiology is frequently used.
A biological dentist will use either a blood test or applied kinesiology to determine which composite filling or other dental material is most appropriate for each individual patient.
Conventional dentists who don’t use kinesiology simply use their favorite (translation: the cheapest) composite, or worse, amalgam materials for every single patient and situation regardless of the patient’s health status, medical history, or sensitivities.
When I had dental surgery a few years ago, my biological dentist muscle tested every single drug and supplement option.
It took about 15 minutes to determine the exact mix that was going to produce the best results for my surgery.
I have no way of knowing if this careful determination made any difference.
However, I can say that I recovered with no antibiotics needed. In addition, I experienced minimal discomfort and required no painkillers.
Use by Other Practitioners
As mentioned above, kinesiology is frequently used by practitioners to assess whether a particular food, supplement or other substance weakens (or strengthens) a patient.
Testing involves placing the substance either:
- In the patient’s mouth (under the tongue)
- Having the patient hold it in his/her hand
At that point, the practitioner tests for weakness.
If the muscle stands up to the manual pressure exerted by the practitioner while the patient is being exposed to the food or supplement, it is deemed beneficial.
The food or supplement is determined to be problematic if the muscle gives way.
Thus, for those that are unsure whether a particular food or supplement is helpful, a visit to an experienced kinesiologist is recommended.
These practitioners may also use a Past Pointing test for autoimmunity or a pulse allergy test to help identify weaknesses.
Muscle Testing to Identify Optimal Supplements
To give you an example of how muscle testing works with supplements, let’s take a look at cod liver oil (CLO).
A frequent question I receive is what type is best to take.
To know for sure, it is a good idea to take a bottle to a trusted practitioner who can use kinesiology to test it.
If this isn’t possible, here is a very good clue what to do!
According to the staff at the clinic Biodynamic Wellness, more than 95% of people muscle test most positively for high vitamin cod liver oil.
This is exactly the kind of CLO that Dr. Weston A. Price found to be most beneficial in his practice early in the last century! He wrote about it in his book Nutrition and Physical Degeneration.
These four CLO brands are the only ones I currently know of that qualify as “high vitamin”.
Processed cod liver oil brands from the health food store with added synthetics or low natural vitamin content rarely pass muster.
For individuals that do not test well for the good stuff…high vitamin cod liver oil…usually there are issues with liver or gall bladder congestion that need to be resolved first.
After that condition is addressed, these people can be tested again, usually with positive results.
Within the high vitamin cod liver oil brands, those with sensitivity to histamines tend to muscle test best for raw, virgin cod liver oil.
Dr. Louisa Williams, author of Radical Medicine and a frequent speaker at Wise Traditions conferences, has used muscle testing of various types of cod liver oil in her practice. Her website and writings explain more if you wish to delve deeper into the subject.
Conclusion
In sum, if you are confused in any way about which foods, supplements or therapies you should be using to help improve or maintain your health, kinesiology can be a great tool under certain circumstances.
It can help identify if certain foods and supplements are in harmony with your body or could actually work against the healing process.
Vanessa
This is ridiculous, I am a Kinesiologist, this is not Kinesiology. In your “How it works” section, you explain the process but you do not explain how it works. How does this work physiologically?
Danielle
I have been healed by Muscle Testing. It is all how good the practitioner is and how well you stick to the dietary recommendations. I would not go to a regular doctor who could take up to 5 visits to find out what a Kinesologist can pick up in 20 minutes. It has saved my life!!!
Ann
Thank you Sarah. As above so below. Kinesiology is grounded in electrical/magnetic principles that govern the Universe as described in the electric universe theory ( https://www.thunderbolts.info/wp/about/ ) . The electro/magnetic principles are understood, our bodies are currents of electricity, and electrical currents always create magnetic fields, this is true in space, galaxies, stars, planets, moons, earth, our bodies our cells and our molecules. If you want to watch a really cool video on these principles, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YkWiBxWieQU The Long Path to Understanding Gravity | EU2015. It may seem off subject but you will get the connection of what is going on in the cosmos and what is going on in our bodies. Gerald Pollack is a water scientist, and he has some real interesting studies on the elctrical principles in water and a fourth state of water that sheds light on homeopathy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JnGCMQ8TJ_g Electrically Structured Water, Part 1 | EU 2013 , This one is interesting https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q33KyLkP_Rg in that Dr. Pollack talks of gels and water, think stock, and the fourth state of water. Enjoy.
jeanine
Just a word to the naysayers. Look into frequency and how everything has a frequency. Muscle testing is using your body’s “electrical” system to test for what it needs. It has saved my health and thousands of $ in supplements.
Karl
I am not a practitioner but I do use kiniesiolgy on myself and family.. like someone mentioned is about frequencies.
As far as foods and what supplements are best for a person, for me that person or supplement does not even have to be present in order for me to test the products on the individual. After all frequencies are not tied to a specific plane. I have had much success over the years using this method.
Carrie
I had my son tested after having suffered from eczema and itching since 2 months old. The results provided a list of foods he was sensitive to as well as goods he was compatible with. We were given a bunch of supplements, which we gave and still give to him daily. After several months with no improvement, we decided to go to a conventional allergist to get a skin test done. Milk, eggs, wheat, soy, and peanuts were tested. After only 2 min, a very large welt developed from the peanut allergen. We were told my son has a “significant allergy” to peanuts and were prescribed an epi pen. The problems is, the muscle testing determined peanuts were compatible!! How could my son be compatible with peanuts and have such an extreme reaction? I question the accuracy of this method of testing.
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
It is important to remember that muscle testing only determines sensitivities at one single point in time. This is similar to a blood test. You might have high triglycerides with one blood test and then after making dietary and lifestyle changes, you might have another blood test later which shows improvement, for example. You have to continue monitoring progress with muscle testing and/or blood testing and observe change over time to get a complete picture.
RC Anderson
When Itested negative for a bioalgae concentrate I asked the suppliers why. Here was Dr. Roland Thomas’s answer:
Kinesiology is a half science subject to the three influences :
· the training/experience or lack of, and the belief/knowledge or lack of from the tester,
· then the belief/knowledge of the person being tested,
· and finally the actual object/substance being tested.
It is impossible to place faith in such a chain full of potential errors. There is no empirical evidence that kinesiology should be relied on.
Victor Cozzetto
Fantastic post Sarah. More people need to know about AK, and this is a great way to make them aware of an immediate practical use.
This should also help shut down the rhetoric around FCLO, as it adds some clarity and understanding, as well as more evidence of its effectiveness.
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
Yes, exactly! Just go test and stop worrying about the rumors. Find out once and for all if FCLO is good for you or not. Note that 95% or so of folks tested by Biodynamic Wellness tested best for FCLO or FSLO so play the odds if you can’t get tested right away or can’t afford an appointment to get it done.
Three Pipe Problem
It’s disappointing to see a pseudo-scientific practice touted on this blog Sarah.
Various studies have shown no difference between random guessing and AK. This makes sense, because I’m not aware of any proposed scientific mechanism that would explain why muscle weakness would indicate nutritional deficiencies when a pill is held in the hand.
Goodheart, the inventor of muscle testing, openly admitted using “psychic communication” to develop the theory. His books are full of references to the occult mystic, Manly P. Hall. The organization he founded, International College of Applied Kinesiology, continues to have leadership that quote liberally from Manly P. Hall. In addition to offering “free hypnosis”.
As I have witnessed the practice, Applied Kinesiology works about like a ouija board (i.e. it relies on the ideomotor effect), except using the human body instead of the board and stylus.
There may be some benefit to AK for supplements one has ingested before, since one may effectively be consulting the subconscious mind about whether one wants to ingest a supplement again, based on the prior “gut” experience. This being said, there is not reason to use a mysticall “woo woo” procedure that treats one’s muscles as divination equipment. By raising your consciousness and searching your feeling’s, you can obtain the same information from your “gut” without relying on a mystrical construction, or deluding yourself about where the information is coming from.
I’m your new favorite commenter, eh Sarah? 🙂
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
Diss all you like .. the fact is that many reputable practitioners including DOs, NDs and others use muscle testing with great success in their practices. And, who says that it is just random guessing … conventional medicine of course!
The fact is that some of the most critically important health information I have ever received in my life that helped me tremendously over the long term came from muscle testing. I know many others can say the same. Don’t knock it until you try it! And, if you really must have something more “scientific” then just do a blood test which can accomplish much of the same 🙂
Three Pipe Problem
First, thank you for publishing my critical comment!
“many reputable practitioners” – that’s the argument from authority
nizkor.org/features/fallacies/appeal-to-authority.html
“use muscle testing with great success in their practices.”
Based on what. My admittedly brief review of the literature on this indicated there is a big void of scientific — not “scientific”, but scientific, which has a real definition — evidence demonstrating that it works. Since most health practitioners employ a wide range of similar alternative treatments in most cases, how would they know which specific component is or isn’t working, in this case of observed health improvements. Without an experiment, it’s tough.
“And, who says that it is just random guessing … conventional medicine of course!”
No, the people who have studied it are the ones who have said it isn’t detectably *better* than random guessing, in the experiments they have conducted. To imply that a skeptic of AK is somehow in favor of conventional medicine as a whole, is also a fallacy.
“The fact is that some of the most critically important health information I have ever received in my life that helped me tremendously over the long term came from muscle testing. I know many others can say the same.”
I actually believe you, to a certain degree. But I provided an alternative explanation that you seem to have ignored. Let of offer analogy.
A few days ago, Food52 published an article called “A Magical Trick for Keeping the Sparkle in Your Sparkling Wine”
food52.com/blog/13992-a-magical-trick-for-keeping-the-sparkle-in-your-sparkling-wine). The “trick” is to place a spoon in the neck of the opened bottle. Now multiple investigations have shown that it’s baloney. In fact without any spoon at all the carbonation can stay in the wine for quite some time, especially if it isn’t disturbed and remains cold. Of course, both are not stellar ideas, compared to some alternatives. But the author *swore* that it works. She had personal experience.
It’s this sort of propensity that makes scientific investigation superior to analysis of personal anecdotes. Although, it does certainly come with its own set of challenges. Including the fact that its hard tor science to do enough experiments with enough variables to compete with, say, some of the things we can learn from traditional practices. Which AK isn’t.
>> Don’t knock it until you try it!
My religious beliefs prevent me from trying what I see as a divination procedure. Obviously others may see things differently, and I respect that. However I have close friends who have sworn by AK, and eventually came to realize that the perspective I shared above to be of superior effectiveness. Don’t knock it until you try it?
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
As I said before, if you don’t want to do muscle testing, do the simple blood test alternative which basically shows the same thing.
Three Pipe Problem
If nutritional testing showed the same thing as muscle testing, wouldn’t this something that could be demonstrated consistently – as in an experiment?
Cheryl Rohrer
Three Pipe Problem,
Yes, dis all you like. But why not say it CAN work well? Maybe AK is not always done properly? I do not know, but it CAN indeed work spot on.
My husband suffered from frequent headaches for 20+ years and the worst were his last 10 years where he got to having some form of a headache EVERY day. 3-4x a week a migraine. He saw the “best head doctor” in Rochester, NY during that 10 yr period. By chance, he went to a Chiro practicing AK. After the initial evaluation visit, he did AK on my husband and his arm FLEW DOWN when milk was evaluated on him. He was clearly having a huge issue with milk. He removed it from his diet and not only did his headaches/migraines disappear IMMEDIATELY, but the knots in the back of his neck which he thought were causing his migraines disappeared, the need for Prilosec (for heartburn/gastroesophageal reflux) disappeared, what he described as Tendonitis in his knees disappeared–forever complaining about needing a first floor bedroom, and the pain in his hand which kept him from unscrewing the lid off a jar.
I am a FIRM BELIEVER that AK CAN work, so it’s worth a shot for those it can help!
Sheryl
This technique still makes no scientific sense to me. How can the body react to a substance if it is being held in bottle? There is no direct contact between the substance and the body. In my mind, the only reason this technique could ever be helpful is due to the knowledge and intuition of the practitioner, not to the technique itself.
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
In biological dentistry, you can also do a blood test in lieu of muscle testing to determine which composite dental material is best if that makes you more comfortable. I know this because my husband was offered the choice (muscle testing or blood test) when he had his amalgams out some years ago so that the dentist knew which material he was most compatible with. I’m sure you could do this with supplements as well, but it would take more time and money to do so.
Bianca
I would like to comment on this very timely article. I have used muscle testing for over 40 years
and feel I have saved my life on many occasions. You can learn to test yourself, but it’s very
confirming to also have someone else experienced in this technique, test you. I do this with medicines and foods. It works best if the item is held in your hand against your stomach (for me, anyway) When I am suspecting a particular substance, I take it to one of two practitioners to check my findings. One caveat: It is most important that the person testing you not know what the substance is (I disguise substance in piece of parchment) because the person testing you can influence the outcome by being negative or positive about what they are testing you on. They must be neutral while doing this. Just another way to enhance our health.. the body does not
lie !! It’s controversial, but it works. Thanks for featuring this subject, Sarah.
Sherrie
It works because your body has an energy field that surrounds it. When the substance enters your field it interacts with it. I’m a physicist and I have worked with 2 excellent AK chiropractors in my life. It works. Is it infallible – nope. Neither are lab tests and standard medical doctors.
Wendy C
I am a firm believer of muscle testing. Our holistic dentist recommended supplements that are helping with my son’s eczema. I was his surrogate and it was amazing to see how well (or not) he reacted to certain supplements. Plus, our biofeedback TCM uses Cyberscan to help us tailor our supplement regimen. That is one powerful machine. It even detected that my son is very stressed right now (he just started a new school).
Jessica
I wish I had this information 20 years ago. It took me several years to figure out that more than 2 decades of nearly daily headaches were due, in part, to histamine intolerance. I also had to learn the hard way that I was unable to tolerate the FCLO. Or kombucha, or kefir, kimchi, pickles, etc.
I’m working with a naturopath now, so hopefully I can overcome the histamine intolerance and enjoy some of these healthy foods again.
I knew I had to avoid a long list of foods, but now I know why. I first heard of histamine intolerance from the comment section of your blog, and the puzzle became more clear. Thank you.
Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist
The good news is that a histamine intolerance can be resolved! Glad you are working with a practitioner who can help with your recovery. It’s very hard not to mention confusing and sometimes discouraging to try and do this yourself.