Posts Tagged ‘migraine’

Can Chiropractic help with your headache? This study suggests so.

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Rupert Clements, one of the chiros at C1, writes:

A recent study snappily called:

Dose response and efficacy of spinal manipulation for chronic cervicogenic headache: a pilot randomized controlled trial

By Haas and co-workers was published in the uber serious Spine (The Spine Journal 2010; 10:117-128) which said that chiropractic was good at sorting out headaches.

As we all know, headaches are very common (with up to 16% of the population having one at any one time) and can very disabling (leading to work-days-lost, absenteeism costs and increased medical benefits spend).

Headaches are broken down into primary and secondary. The primary group is made up of:
• migraine,
• tension-type
and
• cervicogenic headache (CGH).

This last lot, CGH, account for a significant proportion of the 16% point estimate of those suffering primary headaches (but Nilson and Sjaastad have estimated the point to range from 0.4%-4.6%). Whatever. They are linked to neck pain and mechanical dysfunction and so, it is theorized, treating neck pain and mechanical dysfunction through manual therapies will help reduce headache symptoms.

headache woman 310x250 Can Chiropractic help with your headache?  This study suggests so.

Systematic reviews have been conducted on the usefulness of spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) in the treatment of CGH, however the treatment plans offer great variability: from once per week for three weeks to twice per week for 8 weeks. This, clearly, demonstrates a lack of clinical understanding and consensus in the research. This prevents us from being able to confidently set out the prognosis and expectations with respect to SMT.

The purpose of the study was to determine the efficacy of spinal manipulation in CGH and compare a high-dose and low-dose SMT application to a light massage.

One group received low-dose SMT (8 treatments), high-dose SMT (16 treatments), low-dose light massage (8 treatments) and high-dose light massage (16 treatments). The study showed some interesting things:

• While treatment dose had no effect on the use of medication, those receiving SMT used 1/3 less medication at 24 weeks.

• With respect to the number of cervicogenic headaches experienced, those receiving SMT experienced 2.6 fewer headaches per week compared to those receiving light massage.

• At the end of 24 weeks, those receiving SMT experienced 2.1 fewer ‘other’ headaches per week compared to those receiving light massage.

• While dose effects were small, those who received high-dose SMT experienced a greater improvement in neck pain (-5.9 at 12 wks; -10.6 at 24 wks)

• CGH pain, the number of headaches experienced per week and the amount of medication intake all reduced, with sustained reductions, favouring the SMT group.

• Lastly, by eight weeks, the number of weekly headaches was reduced 50% in those patients receiving SMT and on secondary analysis, a 50% reduction in symptoms (obtained via the outcome measures) was achieved in 80% of those receiving SMT.

The authors point out several key limitations to this study:
• The study design was highly complex and multifactorial.
• There was a small number of patients within each subgroup.
• Multiple headache classifications were present within many patients.

Interestingly, for us as chiros, there was no difference between the two dosages of SMT (though SMT proved to be more effective than light massage, irrespective of dosage.). And, as we’d expect, the differences between the SMT and the light massage group were not only statistically significant, but clinically significant as well.

This study is highly relevant and helpful to clinical practice as it strengthens the use of cervical spine manipulation in the treatment of CGH. It is also helpful as it demonstrates that patients do not tend to be cured by this intervention alone, indicating that CGH may require a combined intervention approach which includes exercise, soft-tissue therapy, spinal manipulation and education.

Can Chiropractic help with asthma – yes but no!

Friday, August 28th, 2009

The GCC state “There is some evidence, though more research is needed, that you may see an improvement in some types of:
• asthma
• headaches, including migraine; and
• infant colic”
The problem is not with claims, it‘s with the language. There’s no evidence for cure but if improvement means symptoms generally declining, which I’d say is an improvement in anyone’s book, then there is, if improvement means complete resolution then there isn’t. Language, you see?

There is evidence that chiropractic can help, and I freely admit it is not strong and pretty hard to defend against pedants, but it is not a complete disaster and certainly not in the realms of bogus, particularly if improvement is an acceptable goal. See:

Chiropractic care for nonmusculoskeletal conditions: A systematic review with implications for whole systems research
Hawk C et al. May 2008.
The Journal of Alternative and Complimentary Medicine 2007; 13(5): 491-512. Chiropractic Guidelines and Practice Parameters (CCGPP) expert committee.
This was a comprehensive literature search (using PubMed, Ovid, Mantis, ICL, CINAHL) which identified studies evaluating spinal manipulation and/or mobilization (both chiropractic and osteopathic) or general chiropractic management of NMSK conditions.
The aims of this study were to:
• evaluate the efficacy of chiropractic “care”, not meaning only spinal manipulation, on NMSK conditions and,
• identify specific deficiencies in the literature in order to develop a whole systems approach to researching this topic.

The bit covering asthma, in summary, is:

“Asthma (15 citations total):
3 RCTs reported no adverse effects from spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) although physiological measures did not improve in any study, medication use generally declined, and symptoms were generally reported to improve.”

Now, at:

http://www.bio-medicine.org/medicine-news/The-Adverse-Effects-Of-Asthma-Medication-2935-1/

it states that:

“Latest research shows that a common class of drugs used for acute asthma attacks might be causing the very thing it aims to treat. Many people with asthma rely heavily on these medications, sometimes taking them several times a day.”

So what would you do if it was you who was suffering with asthma – give it a go and see if it led to “medication use generally declined, and symptoms were generally reported to improve” or press on with the drugs?

I know what I would do and I’d be right chuffed if things improved.
Language, do you see?