An accessory group symptom is a condition in which individual painful manifestations in the form of attacks of nausea, palpitations, paresthesia, dizziness, and a feeling of numbness occur during physical activity performed to treat the underlying disease. Morphologically, these conditions are nonspecific, manifesting themselves in the form of a transient change in the metabolism of various tissues of the body, resulting in a short-term increase in cAMP production. When repeating sessions of therapeutic physical activity in the affected area, a state of dynamic equilibrium in the production and breakdown of cAMP is established, which leads to a state of reconstitution and restoration of the performance of systems and tissues. Thus, therapeutic physical activity, due to its multifunctional effect on the body, is a method based on the results of which one can judge the level of compensation, i.e., the effectiveness of treatment. At the same time, it is known that a compensatory transient, temporary increase in the functional state of the body systems is determined by the level of tension of the regulatory systems