Tuesday, July 6, 2010

When the Adjustment is not Enough

The Abridged Rant
Summary
  • Chiropractic is physical medicine aimed at restoring both limited and painful movement patterns
  • Positional faults are responsible for both limited and painful movement patterns
  • Positional faults are caused by one of the three things:
  1. Tissue Extensibility Dysfunction (trigger points, tight muscles and fascia, ect)
  2. Joint Mobility Dysfunction (problems occuring at or within the joint capsule)
  3. Somatic or Motor Control Dysfunction (signals going to and from the brain)
  • Typical healthcare practitioners only focus on local sites of pain and miss the source
  • GCMC screens movement patterns globally, allowing us to find the source of the pain
  • GCMC uses:
  1. Graston Technique for Tissue Extensibility Dysfunction
  2. Mulligan Mobilization for Joint Mobility Dysfunction
  3. Reactive Neuromuscular Training for Somatic or Motor Control Dysfunction
The Full Story
Chiropractic and Faulty Movement
Most would agree that chiropractic in its most simple of forms is centered on the detection and correction of faulty movement. The chiropractic adjustment or manipulation is the profession's most common and most accepted treatment intervention, designed to correct faulty movement occurring at any joint surface in the spine or in the extremities. But why do some chiropractors utilize more than just the manipulation? We at GCMC have a wonderfully simple reason based on very complicated science as to why we have multiple tools in our toolbox and why we feel that sometimes the chiropractic adjustment is just not enough.

The Definition of Faulty Movement
Let us first start with our concept of manual medicine and what we mean by faulty movement. Movement occurs at a joint. We have different types of joints that provide for different types of movement that allow us to move freely through our world and perform all of our activities of daily living. But sometimes movements become painful and can become limited. When this happens, manual medicine steps in to help break the cycle of pain and restore proper range of movement to allow you to continue to enjoy the activities you were temporarily prevented from enjoying.

The Three Components of Movement
Movement at a joint requires for three components to be functioning properly: joint mobility dysfunction, tissue extensibility dysfunction and somatic or motor control dysfunction. Failure of any one of these three components will lead to decreased and possibly painful movement. Traditional chiropractic would refer to the decreased and painful movement as the subluxation. At GCMC we use the term positional fault to describe the improper and painful movement occurring at one or many joints in the body. Arguably we are saying the same thing but we feel that the term subluxation has been misused and abused by so many uneducated people inside and outside of the chiropractic profession that we would like to make a point of limiting the number of ways you can interpret our intentions.

Why the Chiropractic Adjustment Works
So if there are three components, why do so many chiropractors use the manipulation as their first choice? Whether by intention or luck, there are three good reasons why manipulation is an effective treatment for positional faults: pain relief from endorphin release, increased blood flow outside of and nutrients within the joint, and neuromuscular retraining for improved range of motion. These three benefits were all explored in the article titled the Neurophysiological Effects of Spinal Manipulation. In the most recent edition of the Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics, Taylor and Murphy's award winning paper showed how spinal manipulation alone could improve motor function in humans. But sometimes the adjustment is just not enough. Sometimes it only temporarily corrects the faulty movement and sometimes it simply just does not help.

Why the Adjustment is Not Enough: a Story of Symptom vs Cause
The most obvious answer we have as to why the manipulation is not enough is that sometimes the patient's chief complaint, the most obviously limited and painful movement, is nothing but a secondary symptom. Much like a headache caused by tension from the stresses of your occupation, aches and pains can be the result of repetitive stresses and strains put on your body from the demands of your daily life. And unless the injury was caused by blunt trauma from an object impacting your body, many times your aches and pains began as small compensations starting at one part of your body that eventually injured an entirely different area of your body. For example, maybe your first problem was limited mobility at your right hip. Eventually your lumbar spine adapted to the limited rotational ability of your hip and as a result became hypermobile. The hypermobility of your lumbar spine led to poor spinal stabilization at your core, robbing you of the ability to effectively use your upper extremities to perform push and pull movements. Your poor core stability eventually leads to you straining your supraspinatus muscle and results painful and limited arm movements, difficulty sleeping throughout the night and many painful trigger points along the muscles surrounding your shoulder. So you go to a chiropractor and complain of pain in your right shoulder with lifting and pushing, as well as difficulty sleeping at night. If all your chiropractor does is spinal adjustments, he or she will adjust your thoracic spine to help the dynamic of shoulder movements occurring between the glenohumeral joint and the thoracic spine. Even if your chiropractor addresses the other joints of the shoulder girdle or even the strain in your supraspinatus muscle, this is nothing more than taking Advil to temporarily cure your tension headache that occurs every Monday as you try to catch up on all the work that accumulated during the weekend. You must address the hip mobility issue and you must address the poor core stability if you are ever going to truly stop the shoulder pain from reoccurring.

GCMC's Global Take on Health
Poor movement screening techniques is one reason why we at GCMC feel that the chiropractic manipulation is sometimes not enough. No matter how good you are at fixing something you must first know what to fix. Many healthcare practitioners are stuck thinking locally while GCMC takes a more global look at your body. This is why GCMC uses an innovative evidence-based screening technique to identify not just the pain but the true cause of the pain. Once we have identified your painful and limited movement patterns we use three specific treatment techniques as well as many other more common treatment tools to correct the three main causes of painful and limited movement: to joint mobility dysfunction we use Mulligan Mobilization Techniques; for tissue extensibility dysfunction we use Graston Technique; and finally, to correct somatic or motor control dysfunction we use Reactive Neuromuscular Training.