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'''Vertebral subluxation''' is a ] term meaning "a complex of functional and/or structural and/or pathological articular changes that compromise ] integrity and may influence organ system function and general health.", or "a condition in which a ] has lost its proper juxtaposition with an adjacent vertebra (to an extent less than a luxation) in such a way as to alter nerve function" |
'''Vertebral subluxation''' is a ] term meaning "a complex of functional and/or structural and/or pathological articular changes that compromise ] integrity and may influence organ system function and general health.", or "a condition in which a ] has lost its proper juxtaposition with an adjacent vertebra (to an extent less than a luxation) in such a way as to alter nerve function" Chiropractic vertebral subluxation should not be confused with the orthopedic ]. While the orthopedic and medical definition of a subluxation includes misalignment and sometimes nerve damage, it is considered a rare occurrance. | ||
Vertebral subluxation is theorized to affect one spinal disc (]), a section of spine, or the whole spine. For example, a functional ], viewed in chiropractic terms, may be due to a vertebral subluxation manifesting as an arch or abnormal curvature. | Vertebral subluxation is theorized to affect one spinal disc (]), a section of spine, or the whole spine. For example, a functional ], viewed in chiropractic terms, may be due to a vertebral subluxation manifesting as an arch or abnormal curvature. |
Revision as of 15:11, 22 August 2006
Vertebral subluxation is a chiropractic term meaning "a complex of functional and/or structural and/or pathological articular changes that compromise neural integrity and may influence organ system function and general health.", or "a condition in which a vertebra has lost its proper juxtaposition with an adjacent vertebra (to an extent less than a luxation) in such a way as to alter nerve function" Chiropractic vertebral subluxation should not be confused with the orthopedic subluxation. While the orthopedic and medical definition of a subluxation includes misalignment and sometimes nerve damage, it is considered a rare occurrance.
Vertebral subluxation is theorized to affect one spinal disc (degenerative disc disease), a section of spine, or the whole spine. For example, a functional scoliosis, viewed in chiropractic terms, may be due to a vertebral subluxation manifesting as an arch or abnormal curvature.
Chiropractors propose that this condition negatively affects health by reducing the proper circulation of either or both of the autonomic and somatic nervous systems, depending on the degree of subluxation and its location. Although not always painful, chiropractors claim that a subluxation interferes with proper function and healing of your body due to the role of the nervous system as a controller of bodily functions. There is disputed evidence that the chiropractic vertebral subluxation may influence the nervous system.
Chiropractic treatment focuses on treating vertebral subluxation by delivering a chiropractic adjustment to the affected part of the spine to relieve the hindrance to nerve function.
Historical definitions
"The possible neurological consequences of subluxation were described by Harrison in 1821, as quoted by Terrett:“When any of the vertebrae become displaced or too prominent, the patient experiences inconvenience from a local derangement in the nerves of the part. He, in consequence, is tormented with a train of nervous symptoms, which are as obscure in their origin as they are stubborn in their nature...”"
In the chiropractic system developed by Daniel D. Palmer in the late 1800's, Palmer originally believed that he had discovered the cause of all diseases suffered by mankind - the vertebral subluxation.
- "Physiologists divide nerve-fibers, which form the nerves, into two classes, afferent and efferent. Impressions are made on the peripheral afferent fiber-endings; these create sensations which are transmitted to the center of the nervous system. Efferent nerve-fibers carry impulses out from the center to their endings. Most of these go to muscles and are therefore called motor impulses; some are secretory and enter glands; a portion are inhibitory their function being to restrain secretion. Thus, nerves carry impulses outward and sensations inward. The activity of these nerves, or rather their fibers, may become excited or allayed by impingement, the result being a modification of functionating—too much or not enough action—which is disease."
Chiropractors use and have used various terms to express this concept: subluxation, vertebral subluxation (VS), vertebral subluxation complex (VSC), "killer subluxations," the "silent killer," or a "bone out of place" (BOOP) .
Functional theory of vertebral subluxation
Vertebral subluxation | |
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The formation of the spinal nerve from the dorsal and ventral roots | |
A spinal nerve with its anterior and posterior roots. | |
Details | |
Identifiers | |
Latin | radix posterior |
Anatomical terminology[edit on Wikidata] |
As a continuation of the brain, the spinal cord contains nerve tracts which are the neurological pathways thru which the brain communicates with most of the body. While the brain is protected by the skull, the spinal cord is protected by the vertebral column. As nerves branch off the spinal cord, they form the spinal nerve roots which exit the vertebral column thru an opening made by two adjacent vertebrae, called the Intervertebral foramen.
There are several hypotheses on how a misaligned vertebra may cause interference to the nervous system.
- Nerve compression hypothesis: suggests that when the vertebrae are out of alignment, the nerve roots and/or spinal cord can become pinched or irritated. While the most commonly referenced hypothesis, and easiest for a patient to understand, it may be the least likely to occur.
- Proprioceptive insult hypothesis: focuses on articular alterations causing hyperactivity of the sensory nerve fibers.
- Somatosympathetic reflex hypothesis: all the visceral organ functions can be reflexly affected by cutaneous or muscular stimulation.
- Somatosomatic reflex hypothesis: afferent impulses from one part of the body can result in reflex activity in other parts of the body.
- Viscerosomatic reflex hypothesis: visceral afferent fibers cause reflex somatic problems.
- Somatopsychic hypothesis: the effects of a subluxation on the ascending paths of the reticular activating system.
- Neurodystrophic hypothesis: focuses on lowered tissue resistance that results from abnormal innervation.
- Dentate ligament-cord distortion hypothesis: upper cervical misalignments can cause the dentate ligaments to put a stress on the spinal cord.
- Psychogenic hypothesis: emotions, such as stress, causing contraction in skeletal muscles.
Vertebral subluxation has been described as a syndrome with symptoms including: altered alignment; aberrant motion; palpable soft tissue changes; localized/referred pain; muscle contraction or imbalance; altered physiological function; reversible with adjustment/manipulation; focal tenderness.
The claims for the existence of vertebral subluxations are a matter of controversy, and the chiropractic concept is not recognized by mainstream medicine and science (JMPT, .) The Wilk v. American Medical Association trial transcripts mention this fact:
- There was evidence that the chiropractic theory of subluxations was unscientific, and evidence that some chiropractors engaged in unscientific practices. The court did not reach the question of whether chiropractic theory was in fact scientific. However, the evidence in the case was that some forms of chiropractic manipulation of the spine and joints was therapeutic. AMA witnesses, including the present Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the AMA, testified that some forms of treatment by chiropractors, including manipulation, can be therapeutic in the treatment of conditions such as back pain syndrome.
Treatment of vertebral subluxation
When chiropractors believe a vertebral subluxation is present they may apply a specific adjustment to the spinal bone considered to be subluxated. While there are a number of different chiropractic techniques, each can be characterized by the description of having a short-lever, high velocity, low amplitude (HVLA) thrust and specific line of correction.
While chiropractors do attempt to direct treatment at specific movement segments of the spinal column, what separates the chiropractic adjustment from other manipulative techniques is the chiropractic intent - the treatment of vertebral subluxations. No other profession claims to have this intent.
Once these bones or vertebrae are theoretically restored to their proper position and/or motion, the spinal cord and/or its nerve roots are no longer considered to be hindered or compressed. Thus, without interference from a subluxation, the brain is considered to be enabled to transmit and receive all the messages through the spinal cord and nerve roots to all the parts of the body supplied by those nerves. The spine is considered "in line" and thus it is assumed the body functions in a coordinated manner resulting in increased health.
The traditional chiropractic hypothesis - that vertebral subluxations cause neurological interference that may result in disease, disorder, or dysfunction - remains controversial. Vertebral subluxation remains a hypothesis.
Scientific investigation of vertebral subluxation
"Conclusions: Joint complex dysfunction should be included in the differential diagnosis of pain and visceral symptoms because joint complex dysfunction can often generate symptoms which are similar to those produced by true visceral disease."
A 2004 reasearch team at the National University of Health Sciences evaluated changes of the lumbar vertebral column following fixation (hypomobility). Their findings indicate that fixation results in time-dependent degenerative changes of the zygapophysial joints.
Researchers at the RMIT University-Japan, Tokyo studied reflex effects of subluxation with regards to the autonomic nervous system. They found that "recent neuroscience research supports a neurophysiologic rationale for the concept that aberrant stimulation of spinal or paraspinal structures may lead to segmentally organized reflex responses of the autonomic nervous system, which in turn may alter visceral function."
Professor Philip S. Bolton of the School of Biomedical Sciences at University of Newcastle, Australia writes in JMPT, "The traditional chiropractic vertebral subluxation hypothesis proposes that vertebral misalignment cause illness, disease, or both. This hypothesis remains controversial." His objective was, "To briefly review and update experimental evidence concerning reflex effects of vertebral subluxations, particularly concerning peripheral nervous system responses to vertebral subluxations. Data source: Information was obtained from chiropractic or, scientific peer-reviewed literature concerning human or animal studies of neural responses to vertebral subluxation, vertebral displacement or movement, or both." He concluded, “Animal models suggest that vertebral displacements end putative vertebral subluxations may modulate activity in group I to IV afferent nerves. However, it is not clear whether these afferent nerves are modulated during normal day-to-day activities of living end, if so, what segmental or whole-body reflex effects they may have.”
History
In its chiropractic context, the term "subluxation" was first described by Daniel David Palmer, who was possibly inspired by osteopath Andrew Still. Still's model was a disturbance of blood flow to various organs from what he termed "osteopathic lesions", resulting in weakening of tissues and organs. Palmer's understanding, based on the scientific knowledge of the time, was that a disturbance of nerve supplies to the same tissues and organs more readily explained the changes produced after correction ("adjustments") of misaligned spinal bones.
The original investigation and research into this newly described entity are shrouded in confusion, due to lack of formal notes, and the political struggle that ensued to establish a stable fountainhead for the entire chiropractic profession. A popular version was that Palmer restored long-lost hearing to a janitor by realigning bones of his spine. Sources from the period claim that chiropractic as a treatment form gained notoriety during the 1918 Flu Epidemic, when it was alleged that patients receiving "adjustments" had significant lesser mortality than those treated with conventional medical treatments of the day.
Osteopath Irwin Korr investigated and said he confirmed the influence of nerve involvement in the mechanism of health and disease. However, osteopathic and chiropractic have diverged in their scope and focus. Whereas chiropractors have retained as their main goal the detection and correction of subluxations, osteopaths have shifted toward a more medical approach to care.
Both the osteopathic "subluxation" and the chiropractic "vertebral subluxation" remain hypotheses and are not universally accepted within their respective professions, much less outside of them.
Critiques
An area of debate among chiropractors is whether "vertebral subluxation" is a metaphysical concept (as posited in B. J. Palmer's philosophy of chiropractic) or a real phenomenon.
In an article on chiropractic vertebral subluxation written in 2005, the authors say:
- "There is nothing inherently dogmatic or anti-scientific in the notion that an articular lesion may have health consequences, or that correction of joint dysfunction may relieve symptoms and/or improve health. Neither does our current inability to predict the effects (if any) of subluxation and/or the benefits of subluxation-correction relegate this hypothetical construct to the dustbin of clinical theories. Indeed, it would be just as inappropriate to dispose of this largely untested theory without data as it is to proclaim its meaningfulness without adequate evidence. On the other hand, as Carl Sagan suggested, extraordinary claims will require extraordinary evidence. With respect to the supposed mechanisms of adjusting, Haldeman reminds us that "What must be avoided... is the unreasonable extrapolation of current knowledge into speculation and presentation of theory as fact." Given the current deficiency of empirical data, the only sound scientific-epistemological position that we can conceive of is to acknowledge our ignorance: we don't know if subluxation is clinically meaningful or not. We suggest that this is a requisite first step toward greater wisdom concerning subluxation."
The concept of vertebral subluxation has been plagued with definitional problems since its inception. One of chiropractic's most staunch defenders of belief in the vertebral subluxation provides this explanation as a possible cause of the confusion:
- The vertebral subluxation cannot be precisely defined because it is an abstraction, an intellectual construct used by chiropractors, chiropractic researchers, educators and others to explain the success of the chiropractic adjustment.
- This is not a unique state of affairs, abstract entities populate many branches of science...
- Subluxations, genes, gravity, the ego and life are all heuristic devices, "useful fictions" that are used to explain phenomenon that are far larger than our understanding. We use them as long as they work for us and discard or limit their application when they become unwieldy or unable to account for new observations...
- Critics of chiropractic have incorrectly assumed that chiropractic is based on the theory or principle that vertebral subluxations cause "pinched" nerves that cause disease. They have it backwards. Chiropractic is based on the success of the spinal adjustment. The theory attempting to explain the success of the adjustment (nerve impingement, dis-ease, subluxations) followed its clinical discovery.
- Examples of such erroneous criticisms based on this straw-man argument abound in the medical literature. Some examples: "The teachers, research workers and practitioners of medicine reject the so-called principle on which chiropractic is based and correctly and bluntly label it a fraud and hoax on the human race." "The basis of chiropractic is completely unscientific." The theory on which chiropractic is based , namely that a "subluxation" of a spinal vertebra presses on a nerve interfering with the passage of energy down that nerve causing disease to organs supplied by that nerve, and that chiropractic "adjustments" can alleviate the pressure thereby treating or preventing such disease. There is no scientific evidence for the validity of this theory."
- To be fair, statements by some chiropractors have tended to perpetuate this misunderstanding: "Pressure on nerves causes irritation and tension with deranged functions as a result."
- When chiropractors declare that "pinched nerves" "nerve impingement" "spinal fixations" or others mechanisms of action explain how subluxations affect the person and how chiropractic works they are making the same mistake medical critics make - assuming chiropractic is based on theory. Mechanisms and theories are useful tools, but their limitations should always be kept in mind. Koren
Whether one accepts the statement, "Subluxations, genes, gravity, the ego and life are all heuristic devices, "useful fictions" that are used to explain phenomenon that are far larger than our understanding," gravity and genes, unlike vertebral subluxations, have been empirically verified. At the present time, "vertebral subluxation" remains a metaphysical construct, posited by chiropractic's philosophy of disease, neither of which have been verified, submitted to double-blind tests, much less are capable of falsifification. Thus, confusion continues.
The concept of vertebral subluxation has been a source of contention throughout the history of the profession. It has drawn criticism from outside the profession, and has also created division and discussion within the profession. The following citation from within the profession sums up the problems:
- "The dogma of subluxation is perhaps the greatest single barrier to professional development for chiropractors. It skews the practice of the art in directions that bring ridicule from the scientific community and uncertainty among the public. Failure to challenge subluxation dogma perpetuates a marketing tradition that inevitably prompts charges of quackery. Subluxation dogma leads to legal and political strategies that may amount to a house of cards and warp the profession's sense of self and of mission. Commitment to this dogma undermines the motivation for scientific investigation of subluxation as hypothesis, and so perpetuates the cycle."
References
- Palmer DD (1910) The Science, Art and Philosophy of Chiropractic Portland, Oregon: Portland Printing House Company p20
- Strang,V (1984) Essential Principles of Chiropractic Davenport : Palmer College of Chiropractic, OCLC: 12102972
- Bolton P (2000). "Reflex effects of vertebral subluxations: the peripheral nervous system. An update". J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 23 (2): 101–3. PMID 10714535.
- Keating J, Charlton K, Grod J, Perle S, Sikorski D, Winterstein J (2005) Subluxation: dogma or science? Chiropr Osteopat. 2005; 13: 17. available online
Further reading
- Reflex effects of vertebral subluxations: the peripheral nervous system. An update, Journal of Manipulative Therapeutics, Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 101-103 (February 2000). Abstract.
- Foundations of Chiropractic: Subluxation, Meridel I. Gatterman, Mosby-Year Book, Inc., 1995, hardcover textbook, 487 pages, ISBN 0815135432
External links
- Journal of Vertebral Subluxation Research - A Peer-Reviewed Scientific Journal
- Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics - A Peer-Reviewed Journal
- Chiropractic's Elusive Subluxation - Article by Stephen Barrett, M.D.
- Does the Vertebral Subluxation Exist? - Article by Tedd Koren, DC