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Researchers concluded
the following:
“Cervical spinal
manipulation was associated with improvement in headache outcomes in two
trials involving patients with neck pain and/or neck dysfunction and
headache. Manipulation appeared to result in immediate improvement in
headache severity when used to treat episodes of cervicogenic headache
when compared with an attention-placebo control. Furthermore, when
compared to soft-tissue therapies (massage), a course of manipulation
treatments resulted in sustained improvement in headache frequency and
severity.”
• For tension-type
headache, the researchers point to a study that compared manipulation to
amitriptyline, a drug commonly prescribed for headache. Said the
researchers from Duke, “despite the uniform and relatively low dose of
amitriptyline, however, adverse effects were much more common with
amitriptyline (82 percent of patients) than with manipulation (4
percent). During the 4-week period after both treatments ceased,
patients who had received manipulation were significantly better than
those who had taken amitriptyline for both headache frequency and
severity. Although amitriptyline is usually continued for longer than 6
weeks, the return to nearbaseline values for headache outcomes in this
group contrasts with a sustained reduction in headache frequency and
severity in those who had received manipulation.”
“The authors from Duke
have conscientiously and methodically resurrected and updated the
evidence underlying the behavioral and physical treatment options for
headache,” said Anthony L. Rosner, Ph.D., the director of research for
the Foundation for Chiropractic Education and Research (FCER). “In so
doing, they have recognized the elements of chiropractic management as
viable options for treating cervicogenic and possibly tension headache
as well. We expect that this will publication gain the appropriate
recognition in the healthcare marketplace.”
“This new report helps
validate what doctors of chiropractic and their patients have known for
decades —that chiropractic adjustments are an effective treatment option
for headache sufferers,” said American Chiropractic Association (ACA)
President James A. Mertz, DC, DACBR. “As alarming reports about the
risks of prescription and over-the-counter drugs continue to surface,
the health care community and patients should consider safe and
effective non-drug treatments such as chiropractic care.”
This report was
produced by the Duke University Evidence-based Practice Center (EPC)
that is one of 12 institutions to be awarded the trademark designation
“EPC” by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
Long Term Relief For
Headache
Chronic tension headache
sufferers should consider chiropractic treatment as a long-term solution
to their ailment without the side effects of drugs, according to a study
funded by the Foundation for Chiropractic Education and Research (FCER).
The study found that when six weeks of spinal manipulative treatment by
chiropractors was compared to six weeks of medical treatment with
amitriptyline, an antidepressant used to control severe headache pain,
the chiropractic patients experienced fewer side effects, and the
positive effects of chiropractic proved to be longer term, with patients
reporting continued relief after the study was completed.
While anecdotal evidence
has supported chiropractic treatment of tension headaches for years,
until now, there have been no clinical trials that corroborate this
reported success. The study that brings scientific support to these
claims, "Chiropractic Spinal Manipulative Therapy vs. Amitriptyline for
the Treatment of Chronic Tension-type Headaches: A Randomized
Comparative Clinical Trial," was conducted by Dr. Patrick D. Boline
(principal investigator) at Northwestern College of Chiropractic and
published in the March/April issue of the Journal of Manipulative
and Physiological Therapeutics.
For the study, a total of
126 patients between the ages of 18 and 70 were divided into two groups
that were screened and randomly assigned to receive either chiropractic
spinal manipulation or pharmaceutical treatment consisting of
amitriptyline, a tricyclic antidepressant commonly known by the brand
name Elavil. The spinal manipulation group received short-lever,
low-amplitude, high-velocity thrust techniques with moist heat and light
massage of the cervicothoracic musculature prior to manipulation.
Patients were palpated to determine the cervical, thoracic, or lumbar
spinal segment to be manipulated with special attention to the upper
three cervical segments. The patients in the amitriptyline therapy group
received 10 mg daily for the first week, 20 mg daily for the second
week, and 30 mg daily thereafter. This dosage was decreased if adverse
side effected weren't tolerated by the patient.
During the six weeks that
both groups received treatment, both reported similar improvements;
however, four weeks after the end of the clinical trial, the superiority
of chiropractic treatment was evident. The group receiving spinal
manipulation showed a reduction of 32 percent in headache intensity, 42
percent in headache frequency, 30 percent in over-the-counter medication
usage, and a 16 percent improvement in functional health status. The
group receiving amitriptyline reverted to the levels recorded at the
beginning of the study. The groups also differed greatly in their
reporting of side effects. While 82.1 percent of the patients who
received medical treatment suffered from drowsiness, dry mouth and
weight gain, only 4.3 percent of the spinal manipulation group reported
side effects consisting of neck soreness and stiffness.
"At last, with the
results of this study, the claims of thousands of chiropractic patients
who have enjoyed relief from pain without drugs will have to be taken
seriously by the medical community," said Stephen R. Seater, CAE,
Executive Director of FCER. "At last, chiropractic will be recognized as
a viable and scientific alternative for relief of common tension
headaches."
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