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Cavitation Emptor: Tracking the Holy Grail of Manipulation
Dynamic Chiropractic (September 13, 2004)
From Roston and Haynes' classic force-displacement curves of the third
metacarpophalangeal joint in 1947, [1] through Sandoz' application of this phenomenon to manipulation, [2] through the criteria established by Mierau, Cassidy, et al., in 1988 to operationally differentiate manipulations from mobilizations, [3] chiropractors have held the audible release to be a virtual hallmark (if not a holy grail) of a successful manipulation. Indeed, an elegant model proposed by Raymond Brodeur, one of FCER's Peter Bommarito Residency Award-holders, has suggested [4] that the cavitation process provides a simple means for initiating reflex patterns associated with a manipulation. [5–7]
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Biological Rationale for Possible Benefits of Spinal Manipulation
Chapter X; AHCPR Publication No. 98–N002: (December 1997) ~ FULL TEXT
Manipulation is a form of treatment that dates to antiquity and has been practiced in some form in most cultures since that time (Lomax, 1997; Anderson, 1992). One of the first theories related to manipulation might be the statement attributed to Hippocrates: "Look to the spine as the cause of disease." The theories of the early pioneers of chiropractic were firmly grounded in notions that had been widely held in the 1800s, particularly the idea of "spinal irritability" and its correlation with disease (Lomax, 1997; Terrett, 1987). Theories on the nature of the primary spinal disorder amenable to manipulation and on the mechanisms of action of spinal manipulation abound within chiropractic, osteopathy, physiotherapy, and manual medicine. The original chiropractic theory suggested that misaligned spinal vertebrae interfered with nerve function, ultimately resulting in altered physiology that could contribute to pain and disease. In recent decades, chiropractic theories about how mechanical spinal joint dysfunction might influence neurophysiology have undergone significant modification and reflect more contemporary views of physiology (Gatterman, 1995).
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