Chiropractic Medicine for the Treatment of Pain in the Rehabilitation Patient


Acute and subacute conditions

Chronic conditions

Reduce/eliminate symptoms

Minimize lost work time

Restore to prior functional status

Support current functional levels

Prevent chronicity

Pain relief or control, minimize/prevent disability

Prevent disability

Minimize/prevent exacerbation frequency and severity

Educate to prevent recurrence

Enhance patient satisfaction with care and self-efficacy

Promote self-efficacy

Reduce or minimize reliance on medication



Chiropractic care often involves several treatments, which are scheduled over sequential visits. In general, recommendations suggest that patients with initial or recurrent acute and subacute conditions should generally be treated up to three times weekly over a period of 2–4 weeks before re-evaluation [31]. Patients with chronic conditions are usually treated one to three times per week for 2–4 weeks prior to re-evaluation [31]. Patients requiring continued care following an initial course are usually treated at a slightly reduced frequency, for periods of up to 12 weeks depending on individual factors. Treatment frequencies usually reduce as patients respond and either approach or achieve care goals. An evidence-based management guideline for chiropractic care of patients with chronic low back pain is presented in Fig. 44.1 to demonstrate the complex decision-making that is involved in the chiropractic management of individuals suffering from chronic spinal-related pain.

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Fig. 44.1
Chiropractic management algorithm demonstrating complex decision-making involved in chiropractic management of patients with chronic spinal conditions. This figure has been reprinted with permission from Globe G, Farabaugh RJ, Hawk C, Morris CE, Baker G, Whalen WM, Kaeser M, Dehen M, Augat T. Clinical Practice Guideline: Chiropractic Care for Low Back Pain. J Manipulative Physiol Ther 2016. doi.org/10.1016/j.jmpt.2015.10.006




Common Treatment Techniques



Spinal and Other Joint Manipulation


SM is the most easily recognizable therapy associated with chiropractic care. SM is often employed because of the wide range of available techniques and delivery modes, and because SM has several known or suspected physiological mechanisms, making, it broadly applicable as a primary or supportive treatment procedure.

Spinal and extremity joint manipulations can be performed with patients in the prone, side-lying, supine, seated, or standing positions. A wide variety of manipulative techniques are available. Those chosen for treatment are dependent on practitioner training and skills, diagnosis, co-morbid conditions, care goals, and patient preferences. Manipulative techniques are broadly classified as either thrust or non-thrust [32], with many subcategories existing under each label. Most manipulative techniques can be delivered in a wide range of force applications, from robust to gentle, depending on patient tolerance, goals of care, and other factors. Though there are numerous named chiropractic techniques , the most common SM thrust intervention used by DCs is called “Diversified” technique. Diversified technique is reported to be used at least some of the time by over 95 % of DCs [33]. A common non-thrust intervention used by DCs is called Flexion-Distraction , or Cox technique [3436]. Most techniques are manually applied, sometimes with the use of specially designed treatment tables.


Myofascial Therapies


Fascia is composed of connective tissues containing important sensory components. The tissues comprising fascia surround, connect, and infiltrate organs, muscles, bones, and nerves throughout the body [3739]. Fascial pathology can affect the function of most body tissues, and thus, it is an important tissue/organ system considered by DCs when treating patients with musculoskeletal conditions.

Myofascial therapies represent a broad range of treatment techniques used by practitioners within the physical therapy, occupational therapy, and other healthcare professions including chiropractic. Primarily targeting fascial dysfunction or pathology, myofascial therapies are applied manually, sometimes with the aid of specialized tools and active contraction or with stretching on the part of the patient. Common application methods, mechanisms, and indications for using myofascial therapies and other manual therapy techniques used by DCs are listed in Table 44.2.


Table 44.2
Examples of myofascial and neurologically oriented therapeutic techniques used by doctors of chiropractic












































Techniques

Application

Purpose/possible mechanism(s)

Potential indications

Manual friction massage

Manually applied friction technique

• Disrupt adhesions that restrict or cause painful range of motion

• Increase short-term blood flow

• Stimulate sensory nerves, contributing to pain reduction through pain-gating mechanisms and altered muscle tone

• Facilitate lymphatic circulation

• Reduced joint mobility

• Painful range of motion

• Myofascial adhesions

Manual friction techniques applied to soft tissues, typically with stainless steel tools (e.g., Graston technique®, FAKTR®)

Manually applied friction technique with specially shaped tools and emollient to prevent or reduce skin irritation

Active Release Technique® (ART®)

Manually applied pressure to myofascial tissues usually with active or passive stretching

• Disrupt adhesions that restrict or cause painful range of motion

• Improve range of motion

• Increase pain-free range of motion

• Stretch contracted tissue(s)

• Facilitate lymphatic circulation

Myofascial release

Manually applied pressure to myofascial structures often with joint movement

Neural mobilization

Slowly guided passive or active movement of the spine, head, neck, or limbs causing repetitive nerve stretching (or flossing) through constricted spinal or peripheral regions

• Reduce aberrant nerve tension, compression, adhesions

• Facilitate blood and lymphatic circulation for neural tissues

• Spinal and peripheral nerve entrapment syndromes

• Spinal and peripheral mechanical nerve compression syndromes

Proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation (PNF)

A wide array of rehabilitative techniques involving stretching, strengthening, mobility, and motor control training

• Influence neurological signaling to alter muscle activity, coordination, contraction patterns, range of motion, joint stability and overall function

• Joint instability

• Motor control compromise

• Motor weakness

• Injury prevention during motor tasks

• Gait training

Trigger point therapy, Nimmo® Technique, Receptor Tonus Technique, Ischemic compression

Manually applied pressure (or with special hand-held tools) to localized areas of muscle contraction (trigger points)

• Disrupt self-perpetuating localized muscle contraction

• Stimulate increased reflex local muscle circulation

• Facilitate disbursement of inflammatory chemicals from muscle tissue

• Referred pain from muscles

• Confirmed active trigger points


Therapeutic Exercise


Therapeutic exercise is not novel to rehabilitation settings. It is used by several professional groups including DCs . Exercises are prescribed by more than 95% of DCs, often designed to improve spinal stability and function [40, 41]. However, many other exercises are used depending on the condition and other individual factors. DCs commonly incorporate team-based care plans that encourage patients to partake in symptom management and recovery activities using therapeutic exercise [30]. Exercises may be employed to reduce pain, increase available motion, increase strength, and to improve coordination in the performance of athletic movements or daily living activities. The performance of therapeutic exercise by patients may also aid recovery by facilitating personal involvement and commitment to recovery, and by enhancing self-efficacy [42].


Specific Applications



General Protocols


Chiropractic rehabilitation protocols for patients with spinal conditions follow a general model that typically begins with passive modalities, gradually transitioning to more active therapies, unassisted exercise, and self-management/independence [43]. Care for patients with acute spinal conditions often incorporates thrust or non-thrust SM, traction, and directional preference exercises. Active therapies including basic exercises designed to promote self-efficacy and to reduce symptoms may be employed immediately, or delayed until the patient can tolerate them. Exercises such as directional preference movements, consistent with McKenzie diagnosis and treatment principles, are often employed for acute spinal conditions to facilitate symptom reduction and promote movement [44]. As symptoms improve, care plans tend to focus more on improving function for daily living activities or sport-specific tasks, often by progressively implementing additional or advanced exercises.

Treatment for patients with subacute or chronic conditions will often consist of SM and active exercises oriented toward joint mobilization and stabilization as well as strengthening symptomatic or related areas. Similar to acute care principles, treatment focus usually transitions from symptom management to improving function for daily living activities as patients improve. Monitoring treatment progression and effectiveness is accomplished through the use of established outcome measures such as the Oswestry Disability Index [45]. Those patients who fail to meet rehabilitative goals, or show substantive change on outcome measures, may require additional diagnostic testing, an altered treatment plan, and/or referral to another healthcare provider.

Patient education is an integral part of chiropractic care. Education carries the potential to influence and to address psychosocial factors contributing to health conditions [46]. Regardless of the disease, DCs are trained to help patients understand their condition and to develop strategies that enable patients to manage or to resolve it, including recognizing when referral to other providers with expertise in cognitive behavioral therapy and mental health is appropriate [6]. Examples of chiropractic rehabilitation goals and treatment strategies are listed in Table 44.3.


Table 44.3
Chiropractic rehabilitation goals and typical intervention strategies used [6, 43, 79]

























Goals

Intervention strategies

Improve locomotor system function

• Spinal manipulation

• Joint/muscle retraining to reverse/reduce antalgic postures/pain guarding movements

• Other passive modalities (e.g., ice, heat, massage)

• Education to promote self-efficacy and prevent/reduce fear-avoidance behaviors

Improve automatic stabilization responses

• Spinal manipulation

• Training proper movement patterns and postures through proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation exercise

• Sensorimotor training on stable, then progressing to labile, surfaces

• Education to promote self-efficacy and prevent/reduce fear-avoidance behaviors

Reverse, prevent central sensitization

• Therapies designed to reduce pain and increase physiological mechanoreceptor signaling

• Education on chronic pain mechanisms

• Graded exercise

• Myofascial therapies

• Spinal manipulation

Improve strength in key muscles and in overall physical fitness

• Proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation exercise

• Work/sport specific physical fitness exercise

• Isotonic, isometric, aerobic, and graded activity training

• Encouraging quick return to normal or near-normal work

Prevent or reverse ineffective illness behavior

• Education to prevent/reduce fear-avoidance behaviors, passive coping, catastrophization, and promote self-efficacy

• Encouraging quick return to normal or near-normal work

• Graded exercise

• Refer for cognitive behavioral therapy or other specialty

DCs use the broad array of treatments to treat patients with a wide range of neuro-musculoskeletal conditions. Individualized care plans are necessitated by unique patient presentations, even for those with similar conditions. Therefore, few detailed protocols for specific diagnoses are described in the literature. Most commonly, rehabilitation principles, goals, and strategies are applied based on individual elements.

For example, shoulder pain is a common disorder following stroke [47] and spinal cord injury. Contributing factors include poor seated posture, spasticity , and upper extremity overuse [48]. Patients recovering from spinal cord injury and stroke may benefit from multidisciplinary rehabilitation , which includes chiropractic care. Treatment could include manual shoulder manipulation to disrupt adhesions, reduce pain, and to increase mobility. Other treatments that may be employed include strength training for functioning muscles, myofascial therapies to improve mobility and to reduce pain , and graded exercise to improve posture and the coordination of the remaining functioning muscles. Selective SM may also be employed to help reduce pain or to aid mobility in appropriate cases [49]. Examples of condition-specific chiropractic care protocols that have been described in the clinical literature are displayed in Table 44.4.


Table 44.4
Examples of chiropractic clinical protocols for specific spinal conditions [34, 35, 80, 81]







































Condition

Spinal manipulation (SM)

Passive therapies

Active therapies

Education/home exercise and ADL advice

Treatment frequency

Lumbar spinal stenosis/neurogenic claudication

Non-thrust and/or thrust procedures as tolerated

• Passive neural mobilization

• Muscle stretching

• Active neural and lumbar mobilization exercises

• Unassisted exercise

• Education about condition

• Home exercise ADL advice/self-management strategies

• 2–3×/week for up to 6 weeks

• Re-evaluate

• Reduce frequency to 1–2×/week

• Reduce frequency to 0 or to treat exacerbation

Post spinal surgery/injection

Following surgical clearance, performed as indicated and/or tolerated

• Myofascial therapies

• Electrical modalities, heat, and ice

When tolerated:

• Assisted exercise

• Activity and/or exercise to strengthen weakened extremity and trunk muscles

• Education about condition

• When tolerated:

• Basic home exercise to promote self-efficacy

• ADL advice/self-management strategies

• 2–3×/week for up to 3 weeks

• Re-evaluate

• Frequency varies by co-morbidity, severity, and response to care

Radiculopathy (cervical or lumbar)

Subacute or chronic stage, thrust or non-thrust procedures as tolerated

• Passive neural mobilization

When tolerated:

• Active neural mobilization

• Education and performance of directional preference exercise(s)

• Education about condition

• When tolerated:

• Basic home exercise to promote self-efficacy

• ADL advice/self-management strategies

• 2–3×/week for up to 3 weeks

• Re-evaluate

• Reduce frequency to 1–2×/week

• Reduce frequency to 0 or to treat exacerbation


Clinical Case Examples














An elderly male experiences episodic sacroiliac joint area pain. Gradually worsening symptoms characterize the current episode, which has lasted approximately 6 weeks. The case is complicated by a history of cerebrovascular accident (post 6 years), left-sided hemiparesis, and anticoagulant use. Sacroiliac joint injection has been considered, but the treating physician wishes to avoid this procedure because it carries an increased risk due to the current medication regimen. A more conservative treatment with lower risk is sought.

A female in her 30s experiences chronic, frequent, and severe headaches originating in the suboccipital region and radiating forward to both orbits. Topomax®, an anti-epileptic drug used to treat migraine headaches, is the primary pharmaceutical management strategy. Topomax® use reduces symptom severity and headache frequency to approximately 1–2 per week. The patient is seeking to become pregnant and wishes to discontinue the medication regimen due to the increased risk of birth defects associated with this medication.

Chiropractic evaluation of this type of case will typically begin with a clinical interview and evaluation leading to a working diagnosis. Using validated diagnostic procedures, the working diagnosis of sacroiliac joint pain or other diagnosis can be confirmed or otherwise evaluated [27, 50]. Following the initial evaluation, the DC can communicate to the referring physician the working diagnosis and proposed treatment plan, including information that anticoagulant use is not a contraindication to spinal/sacroiliac manipulation.

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Aug 26, 2017 | Posted by in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Chiropractic Medicine for the Treatment of Pain in the Rehabilitation Patient

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