MEDICAL JOURNALS/PROFESSIONAL RESOURCES:
CHIROPRACTIC ORIGINS, CONTROVERSIES, AND CONTRIBUTIONS
Ted J. Kaptchuk, OMD; David M. Eisenberg, MD
Chiropractic is an important component of the US health care system and the
largest alternative medical profession. In this overview of chiropractic, we
examine its history, theory, and development; its scientific evidence; and its
approach to the art of medicine. Chiropractic's position in society is
contradictory, and we reveal a complex dynamic of conflict and diversity.
Internally, chiropractic has a dramatic legacy of strife and factionalism.
Externally, it has defended itself from vigorous opposition by conventional
medicine. Despite such tensions, chiropractors have maintained a unified
profession with an uninterrupted commitment to clinical care. While the core
chiropractic belief that the correction of spinal abnormality is a critical
health care intervention is open to debate, chiropractic's most important
contribution may have to do with the patient-physician relationship.
(Arch Intern Med. 1998;158:2215-2224)
Chiropractic, the medical profession that specializes in manual therapy and
especially spinal manipulation, is the most important example of alternative
medicine in the United States and alternative medicine's greatest anomaly.
Even to call chiropractic "alternative" is problematic; in many ways, it is
distinctly mainstream. Facts such as the following attest to its status and
success: Chiropractic is licensed in all 50 states. An estimated 1 of 3 persons
with lower back pain is treated by chiropractors.1 In 1988 (the latest year
with reliable statistics), between $2.42 and $4 billion3 was spent on
chiropractic care, and in 1990, 160 million office visits were made to
chiropractors.4 Since 1972, Medicare has reimbursed patients for chiropractic
treatments, and these treatments are covered as well by most major insurance
companies. In 1994, the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research removed much
of the onus of marginality from chiropractic by declaring that spinal
manipulation can alleviate low back pain.5 In addition, the profession is
growing: the number of chiropractors in the United States-now at 50,000-is
expected to double by 2010 (whereas the number of physicians is expected to
increase by only 16%).6
Despite such impressive credentials, academic medicine regards chiropractic
theory as speculative at best and its claims of clinical success, at least
outside of low back pain, as unsubstantiated. Only a few small hospitals permit
chiropractors to treat inpatients, and to our knowledge, university-affiliated
teaching centers have not yet granted chiropractors privileges to perform
manipulation on patients.7-9 Although the American Medical Association (AMA) no
longer prohibits its members from consulting with chiropractors, especially
since it was found guilty of conspiracy in this regard (see below),
chiropractic's size and power have not translated into complete acceptance.
Contradictions and tensions exist not only between chiropractic and
mainstream medicine but within chiropractic itself. Since its inception,
chiropractors have disagreed about the definition of the therapy and its scope
of practice. Various theories vie for dominance within the profession. A
multiplicity of competing adjustment techniques also vie with each other under
the rubric of chiropractic. The mode of chiropractic intervention-by means of
the hands-and its unique therapeutic niche, primarily pain disorders, seem too
narrow a foundation for its claim to encompass a distinct health system with
autonomous licensing, credentialing, and educational institutions.
Yet, despite external conflicts and perhaps partly because of them, and
despite the intraprofessional disagreements and uncertainty about its scope of
practice, chiropractic has found an internal coherence that has allowed it to
become an enduring presence in the United States. This integrity has to do with
the profession's belief in the importance of biomechanics; the centrality of
manual therapy, especially for the spine; and a clinical dynamic that provides
patients with explanations, meaning, and concrete experiences that promote a
strong patient-physician bond, a sense of caring, and a restored sense of
well-being.
Chiropractic's Origin
Most sources date the birth of chiropractic as September 18, 1895, when
Daniel David (usually called "D. D.") Palmer (1845-1913) shoved a single
cervical vertebra of a deaf janitor of the Putnam Building in downtown
Davenport, Iowa. A mythic aura clings to the event, partly because of its
importance and because there is little agreement among witnesses about when it
happened, who was there, or what actually occurred.10 (The mythic aspect of the
story may have been intentionally enhanced by selecting the date of Rosh
Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, which was an occasion for revelation in
19th-century American millennialism.11,12) Whether fact, folklore, or both, the
founding blow of chiropractic was more than a chance event or momentary
inspiration. In fact, it creatively synthesized 4 previously distinct health
care traditions: bonesetting, magnetic healing, orthodox science, and popular
health reform.
Bonesetters
Bonesetters were a common fixture in 19th-century health care. As with the
other healing crafts-midwifery, tooth-pulling, and barber-surgery-bonesetting
was often part-time work and served clients who had problems that were regarded
by academically trained physicians as inconsequential or beneath their
dignity.13,14 Bonesetters did much more than help mend bones. They often treated
painful conditions caused by "subluxations," which meant a "joint 'put out'; and
the one method of cure [is] the wrench aid, the rough movement by which it is
said that the joint is 'put in' again."15(p1)
Palmer frequently mentioned the bonesetter's tradition, identified with it,
and probably had some training in it. Palmer's innovation professionalized the
craft, guaranteeing its continuation into the modern era. The upgrade extended
to nomenclature; with help from a minister conversant with Greek, "bonesetting"
became "chiropractic," a phrase that means "hand work."
Magnetic Healing
Although the bonesetting tradition gave chiropractic its method, "magnetic
healing" provided the theory. Palmer acknowledged a special debt to magnetic
healing when he wrote, "chiropractic was not evolved from medicine or any other
method, except that of magnetic."16(p111) Derived from Anton Mesmer's
(1734-1815) investigations into the supposed curative effects of animal
magnetism, practitioners of magnetic healing identified the unimpeded flow of
energy with health and defined illness as obstruction. For 9 years before his
discovery of chiropractic, Palmer was one of a small army of healers who
routinely "magnetized" their patients.17 Palmer's major revision of traditional
magnetism Although the bonesetting tradition gave chiropractic its method,
"magnetic healing" provided the theory. Palmer acknowledged a special debt to
magnetic healing when he wrote, "chiropractic was not evolved from medicine or
any other method, except that of magnetic."16(p111) Derived from Anton Mesmer's
(1734-1815) investigations into the supposed curative effects of animal
magnetism, practitioners of magnetic healing identified the unimpeded flow of
energy with health and defined illness as obstruction. For 9 years before his
discovery of chiropractic, Palmer was one of a small army of healers who
routinely "magnetized" their patients.17 Palmer's major revision of traditional
magnetism was to call it "innate intelligence" and to claim that its pathway was
the human nervous system, especially the spinal cord. Misaligned spinal
vertebrae (the redefined bonesetters' "subluxation") impinge on this beneficent
flow and cause illness. By marrying magnetism to bonesetting, Palmer created a
new and independent medical movement, one more capable of competing for
legitimacy than either of its predecessors had been.
Orthodox Science
Neither bonesetting nor magnetic healing could be persuasively described as
science. The former was clearly a folk tradition, and the latter could not shed
its occult status. Chiropractic, however, could and did describe itself as
science, and in the 19th century, such a label was indispensable if a medical
movement hoped to emerge from a host of contending traditions. Although
self-taught, Palmer saw himself as a scientist and wasted no time in adopting
prevailing scientific notions of the spinal cord to chiropractic theory. An
early 19th-century fascination with the spinal cord led to mainstream
speculation, and by 1828, orthodox physicians began to warn about the threat
posed to the organs of the body by "spinal irritation."18 Spinal irritation in
the 19th century became a catchall for a host of complaints. The theory was so
well accepted that Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809-1894) could comfortably tell the
1871 graduating class of Bellevue Hospital College that he kept the phrase
"spinal irritation" "on hand for patients that [sic] will insist on knowing the
pathology of their complaints."19(p389) Gradually discarded by mainstream
medicine and replaced by the term "neurasthenia" (and later, "depression"),
spinal irritation entered into chiropractic through the subluxation terminology
of bonesetters. Palmer extended the scope of spinal irritation and subluxation
beyond the class of ailments that otherwise defied analysis; it was, for him,
the key to understanding sickness as a whole. At the same time, the adoption of
the widely accepted concept of spinal irritation lent credibility to
chiropractic.
Popular Health Reform
Palmer cured the Davenport janitor of his deafness. This restoration of
hearing might have been regarded as a freak occurrence were it not for a medical
environment in which news of such occurrences was eagerly awaited. A
well-publicized tug-of-war between "regulars" (physicians) and "irregulars"
(alternative medicine practitioners) already had been sweeping the country.20
The introduction of homeopathy, herbal medicine, "Mind Cure," Christian Science,
health food, and hydropathy had prepared Americans to look for cases that, on
the one hand, pointed to the limitations of mainstream medicine and, on the
other, made the miraculous seem obtainable.21 The way to perfect health was on
the horizon, waiting to be grasped, described, and disseminated.
The unique union of bonesetting, magnetism, and orthodoxy was warmly
received. The conflict for medical hegemony both helped and was helped by
chiropractic. Palmer's invectives against the establishment of
"germo-anti-toxis-vaxi-radi-electro-microbio-slush death producers"22 resonated
with the movement, as did his grandiose promises of a medicine "destined to be
the grandest and greatest of this or any age"16(p224) because it was successful
in all forms of disease. Chiropractic was the glamorous new recruit in the old
war with mainstream medicine. Conventional medicine recognized the threat (see
below) and had its own rhetoric ready. For example, in 1925, Morris Fishbein
(1889-1976), editor of The Journal of the American Medical Association,
wrote that chiropractors arrived on the health care scene "through the cellar .
. . besmirched with dust and grime."23(p98)
Dissension Within the Movement
Palmer may have articulated a medical system with a single bold stroke, but
neither he nor his son and successor, Bartlett Joshua Palmer (usually called "B.
J.," 1882-1961), despite their best efforts, could keep it from beginning to
unravel shortly thereafter.
Against the Notion of "Innate Intelligence"
Palmer's notion of innate intelligence (see the subsection on '"Magnetic
Healing" under "Chiropractic's Origin") was in dispute from the beginning. Many
of his first disciples, destined themselves to be influential teachers of
chiropractic, never adopted it. The list of those who reject the innate as
"religious baggage" reads like an honor roll of chiropractic's history.24
Willard Carver (1866-1940), who founded a core group of chiropractic teaching
institutions, thought a physiological theory of nerves was sufficient.25 John A.
Howard (1876-1953), who came to chiropractic from a conventional medical
background and, in 1906, founded what became the National College of
Chiropractic, was thinking of innate intelligence when he warned students not to
"dwindle or dwarf chiropractic by making a religion out of a technic."26(p17)
The first chair of what became the Council for Chiropractic Accreditation,
Claude O. Watkins (1909-1977), called for scientific research and the
abandonment of all cultist and vitalist principles, starting with that of the
innate.27
Today, a substantial number of chiropractors are anxious to sever all
remaining ties to the vitalism of innate intelligence. For these practitioners,
the notion of the innate serves only to maintain chiropractic as a fringe
profession28 and to delay its "transition into legitimate professional
education, with serious scholarship, research, and service."29(p41)
Against the Notion of Subluxation
Palmer's followers were also quick to amend the notion of subluxation. For
Palmer, the term referred to the static misalignment of a single vertebra. In
the earliest chiropractic text ever published (Modernized Chiropractic, 1906),
the meaning of subluxation was expanded to include issues of joint mobility.30
In the late 1930s, these ideas were extended further, making spinal fixation, or
restricted movement, the focus of chiropractic manipulation.31 Some early
chiropractors considered curvature of the spine and posture defects caused by
muscular imbalance to be crucial and bone involvement secondary,23 while others
thought that subluxation arose from fatigue or tension in the back muscle.32
Another group33 maintained that subluxations were disturbances in the nerves
themselves or in the muscles surrounding them, rather than defects in the bones.
Support for the original notion of subluxation was also reduced by continuous
biomedical criticism that points away from, and finally discounts, bone
alignment as the cause of back pain.34 The criticism of an anatomist35 who
concluded after a series of experiments that it is nearly impossible for
vertebral displacement to impinge on a spinal nerve at the intervertebral
foramen has also weakened allegiance to the concept.
Many chiropractors no longer refer to simple subluxation but to a "vertebral
subluxation complex," with an expanded meaning of mechanical impediments beyond
bone displacement that can include mobility, posture, blood flow, muscle tone,
and the condition of the nerves themselves.36 Some want to abandon the term
altogether because it "threatens to strangle the discipline."37 Others speak of
manipulable spinal lesions,38 chiropractic lesions,39 or vertebral blockage.40
For D. D. Palmer, the meaning of subluxation was clear and unambiguous; today,
it refers to an assortment of disturbances. Subluxation is defined less in
theory than in practice: subluxation is what a chiropractor corrects. What
Palmer initiated with a single thrust has evolved into an array of meanings.
The "Straight-Mixer" Schism
Serious as disagreement over the innate and subluxation was for chiropractic,
it is overshadowed by the struggle for self-definition. For the Palmers, mastery
over the spine meant mastery over nearly all disease. They believed that
chiropractic was not the best response; it was the only response. When other
practitioners suggested that they might be guilty of narrow-mindedness, B. J.
Palmer denounced them as "chiropractoids" who had adulterated the "specific,
pure, and unadulterated" chiropractic tradition, opening the way to
"mixers."41(p49) B. J. Palmer's labeling of "straight" practitioners at war with
"mixers" is still used today to describe an unresolved schism.
"Straights" tend to rely exclusively on spinal adjustments, to emphasize
innate intelligence, and to subscribe to the notion that subluxation "is the
leading cause of disease in the world today."42(p25) Since the 1930s, straights
have been a very distinct minority in the profession.43 Nonetheless, they have
been able to transform their status as purists and heirs of the lineage into
influence dramatically out of proportion to their numbers.44
"Mixers" tend to be more open to conventional medicine and to mainstream
scientific tenets. For today's majority mixers, subluxation is one of many
causes of disease.45 This translates into a greater use of therapies other than
spinal manipulation. The National Board of Chiropractic Examiners46 indicates
that most chiropractors use conventional physical therapy techniques, such as
corrective exercise, ice packs, bracing, bed rest, moist heat, and massage.
Nutritional supplements are the next leading nonmanipulative therapy in mixer
practice, and depending on state laws, some chiropractors provide acupuncture,
homeopathy, herbal remedies, and even biofeedback.47
Paradoxically, mixers, despite their wide range of therapeutics, tend to have
a narrower and more modest claim for chiropractic's scope of practice. Also,
some mixers see themselves less as traditional chiropractors and more as
practitioners of a generic complementary medicine.48 A second, larger group of
mixers seeks to situate themselves in the broader mainstream health care system
as specialists in musculoskeletal disorders.49
Spinal Manipulation: The Core Chiropractic Act
Adjusting with the hands-the signature chiropractic gesture-is the unifying
activity that allows chiropractic to transcend its internal discord and create a
coherent profession. Overriding disputes within the profession, the core
question for all chiropractors remains unchanged and agreed on: how should the
hands move the vertebrae? Beneath doctrinal disparity and clinical diversity,
chiropractic has an internal cohesion that is more than a defensive reaction to
a critical world. Chiropractors believe that the correction of spinal
abnormality-the adjustment of vertebrae-is a critical healing act.
Obviously, vertebrae move all the time. The physical activities of daily
life-exercise, turning, twisting, bending-require a normal range of motion.
Greater mobility, or "mobilization," can be coaxed from the joints with the
assistance of a physical therapist, for example, who can stretch the lower spine
by gently moving the thigh of a person lying on his or her side. Eventually,
mobilization reaches an elastic barrier of resistance, known to chiropractors as
"end feel." Chiropractic manipulation is a method of moving vertebrae beyond
end feel, but not so far as to destroy the integrity of joint structure. The
adjustment temporarily creates an increased range of motion. The patient feels
the change and often hears a popping or cracking noise, which some attribute to
a sudden liberation of synovial gases.50
The vertebrae can be moved by direct contact-the "short-lever" technique- or
through a distant linkage, or the "long-lever" method. The latter method is
used, for example, when a dynamic thrust of the thigh moves a vertebra in the
lower spine. "Amplitude" refers to the depth or distance traveled by a
practitioner's thrust. When joints are less accessible or when a long lever is
involved, the amplitude increases. The degree of force applied is yet another
variable.
Emblematic Chiropractic Adjustment
Palmer claimed to have discovered the use of spinous and transverse processes
of the spine as levers and to be the first to use direct contact with a vertebra
that was "out."16(p19) B. J. Palmer developed the "recoil adjustment," in which
a practitioner quickly pushes the vertebra into motion and then, instead of
maintaining pressure, relies on a fast release to generate a type of rebound. B.
J. Palmer thought this maneuver allowed the body's innate intelligence to set a
vertebra in its exact place. With or without recoil adjustment, the short-lever
technique-touching the vertebra directly at high velocity and low amplitude,
that is, by moving a small distance-with the spinal or transverse process as a
fulcrum is considered the typical chiropractic maneuver.
Diversity in Manipulation
Chiropractors besides the Palmers were quick to make their own contributions,
and the profession soon encompassed diverse styles, which often occasioned fresh
disputes.51 Whereas the Palmers emphasized one vertebra at a time, Carver
developed methods to adjust the lumbar spine as a unit. Practitioners such as
Oakley Smith and Solon Langworthy borrowed long-lever osteopathic techniques and
folk methods such as Bohemian (Czech) manipulation. "Diversified technique" is
the label for the largest and most eclectic collection of different methods many
chiropractors use.52
Besides the forceful techniques, gentler methods of manipulation are common
in chiropractic. The sacro-occipital technique, developed by DeJarnette in the
1930s,53 relies on the passive weight of a patient pressing down on
strategically placed padded wedges to reposition the pelvis and spine. The Logan
basic technique54 applies light thumb pressure close to the sacrotuberous
ligament to move the sacrum. The activator technique55 makes use of a small
spring-loaded instrument that looks like a small plunger with a hard sponge on
the tip to deliver pressure to the vertebrae. Some practitioners use tables with
segmental drop pieces to allow low-force, high-velocity adjustment.56 In total,
observers of the profession have counted between 9657 and more than 20058
specifically chiropractic-type maneuvers. Most chiropractors draw on a variety
of maneuvers on the basis of education and personal affinity, and most develop
their own distinctive style.59
Chiropractic Battle for Acceptance
Chiropractic's cohesiveness has been forged in its battle for licensing.
Chiropractors fought zealously for their current legal and professional status,
suspending doctrinal wars when questions of state licensing were at stake.60 The
opposition was usually organized medicine.
From the beginning, chiropractors understood that the decisive factor for
success was professional self-regulation, which would mean protection from
uninformed and possibly adverse supervision and the bolstering of public
confidence in the modality. State recognition was first achieved in Kansas in
1913; Louisiana granted recognition in 1974. The 60 years in between testify to
the vehemence with which conventional medicine resisted.
Hostility on the part of conventional medicine usually backfired. The
struggle in California serves as a case in point. Tullius Ratledge (1881-1967)
led a fledgling movement to license chiropractic in the state.61 In 1916, he was
sentenced to 90 days in jail for practicing medicine without a license. As with
most chiropractic arrests, the charge arose not from patient complaints but from
medically instigated entrapment. Chiropractors were charged with violating the
medical practice act and the controversy generated publicity on a scale the
licensing attempt had never enjoyed before. California chiropractors adopted the
slogan, "Go to jail for chiropractic." At the height of the controversy, 450
chiropractors were jailed in a single year.62 Undeterred, many set up portable
tables to treat fellow prisoners and visiting patients. Chiropractors forgot
whether a colleague believed in the innate or subluxations or was a mixer or
straight. By the time a woman chiropractor collapsed after a 10-day hunger
strike in jail, public sympathy had swung to the side of chiropractic's
courageous practitioners, and the medical lobby had been routed. In 1922, in a
state referendum, Californians voted by an overwhelming majority to license the
profession, and all chiropractors still in jail were pardoned on grounds that
they had been unjustly accused.10 Each state had its version of this battle;
chiropractic emerged the winner every time.
Federal acceptance was later in coming, beginning in the 1970s when state
licensing was already universal. Federal recognition consolidated state
acceptance by providing coverage for chiropractic under Medicaid, Medicare, and
Worker's Compensation; accepting the Council of Chiropractic Education as the
official accrediting agency of chiropractic colleges; granting sick leave based
on chiropractic certification for federal civil service employees; allowing
federal income deductions for chiropractic care; and finally, allocating federal
research money through the National Institutes of Health for chiropractic
research.45
The final victory came with what chiropractors refer to as the "trial of the
century," which again pitted them against the medical establishment. From its
inception in 1847, the AMA had a clause that prohibited members from consulting
with practitioners "whose practice is based on an exclusive dogma."63(p171) In
1957, in reaction to gains made by chiropractic, the AMA explicitly interpreted
this clause to forbid consultations with chiropractors, and in 1963, the AMA's
Committee on Quackery was formed primarily "to contain and eliminate
chiropractic."64(p292)
In 1976, 5 chiropractors brought a suit against the AMA and allied
conventional medical organizations. In 1987, after long and costly litigation,
the US District Court in Illinois found the AMA and many of its associates,
including the American College of Radiology and the American College of
Surgeons, guilty of conspiracy against chiropractors and in violation of the
federal antitrust laws. The permanent injunction issued against the AMA required
The Journal of the American Medical Association to publish the court's
judgment.65 In 1990, the US Supreme Court let this decision stand without
comment. The AMA, chiropractic's historic enemy, had been forced to cease and
desist.
Chiropractic Health Care
Chiropractic health care is based on the endemic presence of pain, especially
low back pain, in the United States. Between 70% and 80% of all adults
experience low back pain at some time in their lives,66 and in any one year,
more than 50% of Americans suffer from the telltale nagging-tugging sensation.67
So pervasive is back pain in this society that, as one authority has mused,68 it
might be abnormal not to suffer from it. Chronic pain is no less a problem, and
data69 suggest that nearly a third of the American population suffers from some
sort of chronic pain.
It is no secret that low back pain and chronic pain are the Achilles' heel of
biomedicine and present a need and opportunity for alternative responses. By far
the largest percentage of patients-at least 80%--go to chiropractors for
neuroskeletal and musculoskeletal problems.70 Of these patients, at least 65%
have back pain; most other symptoms involve the neck, extremities, and head.71
Patient Perceptions
Many large and methodologically sound surveys from diverse sampling
populations leave little doubt that patients believe chiropractic works for
them. The results show that most chiropractic patients and former patients are
likely to be satisfied with the treatment they received.72-75 Studies that
compare patients' satisfaction with chiropractic with that of conventional
medicine in treating low back pain demonstrate marked preference for
chiropractic. A 1986 survey of members of a Washington State health maintenance
organization that offers both conventional and chiropractic care compared the
responses of 359 patients treated by conventional physicians with those of 348
patients treated by chiropractors. Patients treated by chiropractors for low
back pain were 3 times as likely–66% to 22%–to report that they were "very
satisfied" with the care they had received.76 A Utah study (1973) reported
comparable results.77 Patients perceive chiropractic as a valuable component of
their health care.
Scientific Evidence for Spinal Manipulation
Obviously, unimpeachable testimonials are not sufficient evidence of
effectiveness or efficacy. Science demands controlled studies to establish
legitimacy, and although the methodological problems for studying low back pain
are notorious,78 especially for nonpharmacological interventions,79 such studies
are the only basis for evaluating spinal manipulation. Fortunately, about 40
randomized controlled trials (RCTs), predominantly for low back pain, exist for
spinal manipulation. Unfortunately, a substantial number of these RCTs actually
concern forms of spinal manipulation that may not correspond to chiropractic
treatment (eg, osteopathic manipulation, British Cyriax treatment, Australian
Maitland methods, and Dutch manual therapy). Despite this additional weakness,
these RCTs are the basis with which to evaluate the efficacy of spinal
manipulation and, it is hoped, of chiropractic. The scientific investigation of
clinical manipulation has taken 4 forms: sham-controlled RCTs, equivalency RCTs
comparing manipulation with conventional treatments, systematic evaluations in
the form of meta-analysis, and large-scale pragmatic RCTs.
Sham-Controlled RCTs for Low Back Pain
Since 1974, at least 11 single-blind RCTs with at least 1 arm being a sham
control have been performed for spinal manipulation for low back pain. Four
trials80-83 show no difference with manipulation and sham; 3 trials84-86 clearly
show a benefit; and 3 trials87-89 allow for the possibility of some value for
manipulation, depending on what is considered the outcome, the duration of the
outcome, and how outcome measures are aggregated. The methodological quality of
these trials, with few exceptions, is weak (eg, high dropout rates, insufficient
numbers, generalizability of treatment procedures, and outcome measures with
uncertain relationships to expected changes), thus making conclusions
problematic. Advocates argue that the practitioners were not properly trained
and too little treatment was given, and detractors argue that there was
insufficient blinding and that at least 1 of the interventions used more than
manipulation.85
Equivalency or Comparative RCTs for Low Back Pain
At least 15 equivalency trials90-104 for low back pain have been done in
which 1 group of patients received manipulation and at least 1 other group
received conventional treatment. These trials make a better case for spinal
manipulation. Nine trials90-98 show significant benefits, 4 trials99-102
indicate no difference, 1 trial103 is difficult to interpret, and 1104 shows
improvement in only a subgroup in the post hoc analysis. Again, problems abound.
For example, which outcome and what exact time were prospectively viewed as the
decisive measure are sometimes unclear. Also, a large 4-arm trial (manipulation
vs physical therapy vs general practitioner vs placebo ultrasound or diathermy)
is difficult to characterize because it combined patients with low back pain
with those with neck pain and had both equivalency and sham comparisons. The
results are nonetheless interesting: manipulation and physical therapy were
significantly more beneficial than the general practitioner but did not reach
statistical significance when compared with the sham trial. General
practitioners' results were significantly worse than those in the sham
comparisons.105
Equivalency trials can have problems. They often do not control for unequal
belief and credibility and the comparability of physician-patient contact time,
and it is sometimes questionable whether the conventional therapies in the
comparison group have been adequately tested. Nonetheless, this evidence can be
considered impressive. Most comparison trials show manipulation to be better,
and no trial finds it to be significantly worse, than conventional treatments.
As 1 researcher-scholar44(p368) put it, "more orthodox therapy, such as standard
physical medicine or analgesics, despite being more 'scientific,' is not
better."
Meta-analytic Reviews for Low Back Pain
Meta-analytic attempts to objectively summarize most of the above-mentioned
spinal manipulation trials for low back pain and create a larger, more
statistically valid pool of subjects on which to draw conclusions have been
important in the scientific discussion of spinal manipulation. The most widely
reported meta-analytic study of RCTs of manipulation for low back pain concluded
that
[S]pinal manipulation is of short-term benefit in some patients, particularly
those with uncomplicated, acute low-back pain. Data are insufficient concerning
the efficacy of spinal manipulation for chronic low-back pain.106(p590)
Another meta-analysis107 reported similar findings. Still another systematic
review that studied only the 5 trials that were clearly chiropractic
manipulation (as opposed to other or imprecise forms of manual therapy) and did
not mathematically aggregate the outcomes reported that108(p487):
[A]lthough the small numbers of chiropractic RCTs and the poor general
methodological quality precludes [sic] the drawing of strong conclusions,
chiropractic seems to be an effective treatment of back pain. However, more
studies with a better research methodology are clearly still needed.
Pragmatic RCTs for Low Back Pain
Pragmatic RCTs compare 2 treatments under conditions in which they would be
applied normally or optimally. Practitioners and patients are not blinded, and
these trials generally do not control for a wide range of "nonspecific" effects.
The goal is clinical decision. By far the largest and most sophisticated such
pragmatic experiment took place in the United Kingdom. A total of 741 men and
women with chronic low back pain at 11 matched pairs of chiropractic clinics and
hospital outpatient departments were randomly assigned to either chiropractic or
conventional care. The results demonstrated that
chiropractic almost certainly confers worthwhile, long term benefit in
comparison with hospital outpatient management. The benefit is seen mainly in
those with chronic or severe pain."109(p1431)
The 3-year follow-up confirmed these findings.110 Curiously, this study
contradicts the preponderance of other RCTs in which the advantages of
manipulation were more pronounced for acute pain. (Extrapolating these results
to the United States is difficult because the biomedical management of low back
pain in these 2 countries is radically different.)
As mentioned earlier, on the basis of these RCTs and meta-analyses, the
Agency for Health Care Policy and Research in December 1994 stated5(p34) with
guarded optimism that
[M]anipulation can be helpful for patients with acute low back problems when
used within the first month of symptoms. A trial of manipulation for patients
with symptoms longer than a month is probably safe, but efficacy is
unproven.
Scientific Evidence for the Benefits of Chiropractic for Neck Pain and
Headache
After low back pain, neck pain and headache constitute the largest such
research category, comprising at least 10 trials. Of 6 trials of neck
pain,111-116 2 sham trials111,112 show benefits with manipulation; 2 equivalency
trials113,114 show manipulation to be superior to conventional therapy; and in
the 2 comparison trials in which manipulation is additive to conventional
treatment in 1 arm, 1 trial115 shows benefits of manipulation, and 1116 shows no
difference in treatment results. Whereas in a recent meta-analysis, it was
believed that conclusions "must be made cautiously because of the small number
of trials," it could still report that "there is early evidence to support the
use of manual treatments in combination with other treatments for short term
[neck] pain relief."117(p1296) Another recent meta-analysis118 of cervical
manipulation had a similar outcome. Of the headache trials, the single sham
control trial119 for migraine shows a benefit with manipulation, 2 equivalency
trials120,121 (1 for post-traumatic headache and 1 for tension headache) show a
benefit with manipulation, and a third122 (muscle-contraction headache) is
difficult to interpret. Again, the systematic review hesitantly concluded that
the manipulation "may be beneficial for muscle tension headaches."118(p1755)
Scientific Evidence for the Benefits of Manipulation for Other Conditions
The evidence for chiropractic's competence for conditions beyond pain is
scarce. A few such RCTs exist and include menstrual pain,123,124
hypertension,125,126 and chronic obstructive lung disease.127 Drawing any
conclusions, besides that there is a need for research, is premature. This
uneven balance of broad claims and scarce science is undoubtedly a source of
friction between the profession and the biomedical community.
Adverse Effects of Chiropractic
The scientific value of manipulation needs to be viewed in the context of
possible adverse effects. Of 138 cases of serious complications due to
chiropractic, a recent review128 found more than 8 of 10 were from cervical
manipulation. Serious adverse incidences from neck rotation have included
vertebrobasilar accidents with consequences such as brainstem or cerebellar
infarction (or both), Wallenberg syndrome, locked-in syndrome, and such problems
as spinal cord compression, vertebral fracture, tracheal rupture, diaphragm
paralysis, and internal carotid hematoma.118,129-131 Although the rate of
serious complications is still debatable (because the exact denominator and
numerator are unknown), estimates vary from 1 in 400,000132 to between 3 and 6
per 10 million.118 Some researchers133 have advocated an informed consent
procedure before patients receive cervical manipulation with thrust techniques,
and others118,134 have noted that appropriate examination procedures and
specific styles of manipulation may reduce the incidence of complications. The
potential for complications with lumbar spine manipulation seems less serious.
The chief concern is cauda equina syndrome, and the estimated rate of occurrence
has been between "one in many millions of treatments"135 to less than 1 per 100
million manipulations.106
The Art of Medicine and Chiropractic's Effectiveness
It could be argued that additional evidence for chiropractic's effectiveness
is still required for it to establish its scientific merits, especially for use
beyond treating low back pain. Regardless of what future research will
demonstrate, chiropractic will undoubtedly be an important and prominent feature
of US health care. Part of its strength may lie in the domain of the art of
healing and how the chiropractic profession negotiates the patient-physician
relationship.
For people with chronic pain or with other refractory conditions, the
chiropractic visit itself can be a source of comfort even without the addition
of a demonstrable scientific component. Treatment by a chiropractor can generate
a sense of understanding and meaning, an experience of comfort, an expectation
of change, and a feeling of empowerment.136 Chiropractic's combination of
vitalist "innate intelligence" and simple mechanical explanation can give rich
vocabulary for just those illnesses conventional medicine remains poorly
equipped to address. Research indicates that for many of the illnesses
chiropractic treats, precise diagnosis, assurance of recovery, and
physician-patient agreement about the nature of a problem hasten
recovery.137,138
Chiropractic finds its voice exactly where biomedicine becomes inarticulate.
Too often, biomedicine fails to affirm a patient's chronic pain. Patients think
their experience is brushed aside by a physician who treats it as unjustified,
unfounded, or annoying, attitudes that heighten a patient's anguish and
intensify suffering.139 Chiropractors never have to put a patient's pain in the
category of the "mind." They never fail to find a problem. By rooting pain in a
clear physical cause, chiropractic validates the patient's experience. Even for
patients with acute pain, chiropractic's assertiveness, clarity, and precision
provide reassurances. As an anthropologist140(p83) has noted:
[T]he chiropractor provides the patient with a structured, supportive
environment and theoretical explanations designed to take the mystery out of
process and problems. In essence, the chiropractor first manipulates a patient's
belief structure before manipulating his or her physical structure.
Chiropractic is in no sense passive; it is, from the start, engaged. Except
when contraindicated (as in patients with neoplastic disease and those with
extreme osteoporosis), some form of therapy is almost always indicated. For most
symptoms, there is a suitable manipulation or a designated mode of redress.
Chiropractic adjustment evokes an experience of change so palpable that the
patient can often hear it in the characteristic "pop" or "crack," indicating
that normal range of motion has been exceeded and a state of greater mobility
and ease, however temporary, has been achieved. A perception of transformation
has been audibly triggered. The chiropractic approach to healing relies on the
opposite of double-blindedness; it enlists the full participation and awareness
of both parties.
From the first encounter on, chiropractors generate different expectations
from conventional physicians. Because conventional practitioners assume that
back pain, in the absence of systemic signs, is likely to be self-limited, it is
not unusual for a patient to wait weeks for an appointment with a specialist or
for a radiographic diagnostic assessment. Because a chiropractor believes that
back pain is both explicable and amenable to treatment, a patient can usually
obtain an appointment within 24 hours of a telephone call. The message of
empathy, urgency, comprehension, and support conveyed by such a rapid response
is reassuring and provides a heightened sense of care and compassion.
Conclusions
Chiropractic has endured, grown, and thrived in the United States, despite
internal contentiousness and external opposition. Its persistence suggests it
will continue to endure as an important component of health care in the United
States. In response to the countless requests for the treatment of pain,
chiropractors have consistently offered the promise, assurance, and perception
of relief. Chiropractic's ultimate lesson may be to reinforce the principle that
the patient-physician relationship is fundamentally about words and deeds of
connection and compassion. Chiropractic has managed to embody this message in
the gift of the hands.
Author/Article Information
From the Center for Alternative Medicine Research, Department of Medicine,
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
This study was supported in part by grant U24 AR43441 from the National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md; the John E. Fetzer Institute, Kalamazoo,
Mich; the Waletzky Charitable Trust, Washington, DC; the Friends of the Beth
Israel Hospital, Boston, Mass; the J. E. and Z. B. Butler Foundation, New York,
NY; and the Kenneth J. Germeshausen Foundation, Boston, Mass.
We thank Harvey Blume, Janet Walzer, MEd, Debora Lane, and Marcia Rich for
editorial assistance and Robb Scholten, Linda Barnes, PhD, Maria Van Rompay, and
Anthony Rosner, PhD, for research assistance.
Excerpted from Alternative Medicine: An Objective Assessment, American
Medical Association 2000
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