What is MPR?
Manual Pattern Recognition (MPR) is a new tool that improves manual therapies and other health care practices. It was developed when Integrated Manual Therapy practitioners realized that specific regions of the hand perceive different problems in the body. Through their clinical research, they developed this technique for:
- diagnosing clients and pinpointing sources of dysfunction;
- treating pain, dysfunction, disease and disability;
Benefits of MPR
MPR has long lasting effects and can be used on all clients in all phases of health, including those with acute, post-operative, or chronic conditions. MPR:
- has no precautions, side-effects or complications;
- increases efficiency of treatment;
- can be used along with other forms of therapy
- addresses the physical, emotional, and cognitive aspects of dysfunction;
How It Works
By learning to use and direct naturally occurring frequencies in the hand, MPR practitioners connect to the body's internal healing mechanisms. A well-trained MPR therapist can:
- discern healthy areas of the body from unhealthy;
- open restricted areas, allowing nutrients, supplements and medicines to absorb more readily;
- restore the body's natural operations including circulation, lymphatic drainage, immune response, organ function, and others;
- improve sensory integration and treat learning disabilities.
This approach to evaluation and treatment is easy to use and can be quickly integrated into each practitioner's approach. In order to learn MPR, health care practitioners simply need a good working knowledge of human anatomy and physiology




