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Self-reported nonmusculoskeletal responses to chiropractic intervention: A multination survey

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 02:29 authored by Charlotte Lebeuf-Yde, Eva Pedersen, Peter Bryner, David Cosman, Ray Hayek, William Meeker, Junaid Shaik, Octavio Terrazas, John Tucker, Maxwell Walsh
OBJECTIVE - To replicate a previous study of nonmusculoskeletal responses to chiropractic intervention and to establish whether such responses are influenced by the country of study, chiropractors' attitudes, and information to patients, patients' demographic profiles, and treatment regimens. METHODS - Information obtained through questionnaires by chiropractors and patients on return visit within 2 weeks of previous treatment from chiropractic practices in Canada, United States, Mexico, Hong-Kong, Japan, Australia, and South Africa. In all, 385 chiropractors collected valid data on 5607 patients. Spinal manipulation with or without additional therapy was the intervention provided by chiropractors. Outcome measures included self-reported improved nonmusculoskeletal reactions (allergy, asthma, breathing, circulation, digestion, hearing, heart function, ringing in the ears, sinus problems, urination, and others). RESULTS - The results from the previous study were largely reproduced. Positive reactions were reported by 2% to 10% of all patients and by 3% to 27% of those who reported to have such problems. Most common were improved breathing (27%), digestion (26%), and circulation (21%). Some variables were identified that somewhat influenced the outcome: patients informed that such reactions may occur (odds ratio [OR] 1.5), treatment to the upper cervical spine (OR 1.4), treatment to lower thoracic spine (OR 1.3), and female sex (OR 1.3). However, these had a very small "explanatory" value (pseudo R-2 3%). CONCLUSION - A minority of patients with self-reported nonmusculoskeletal symptoms report definite improvement after chiropractic care, and very few report definite worsening. Future studies should use stringent criteria to investigate a possible treatment effect and concentrate on specific diagnostic subgroups such as digestive problems and tinnitus.

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    ISSN - Is published in 01614754

Journal

Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics

Volume

28

Start page

294

End page

302

Total pages

9

Publisher

Mosby

Place published

Baltimore

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2005 National University of Health Sciences Published by Mosby, Inc.

Former Identifier

2005001976

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-02-27

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