Chiropractic For Arthritis - Benefits, Concerns, Side Effects, And Effectiveness
Main Category: Arthritis / RheumatologyAlso Included In: Bones / Orthopedics; Pain / Anesthetics; Complementary Medicine / Alternative Medicine
Article Date: 23 Nov 2006 - 14:00 PDT
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The word ARTHRITIS means inflammation of the joint. Arthritis can affect a person at any age. Sometimes the symptoms of arthritis are called rheumatism. Eight classes of arthritis and related conditions have been identified. These are:
Inflammatory - the membrane of the joint becomes irritated
Attachment Arthritis - frequently in the heels and lower back, the ligament or tendon fastened to the bone becomes irritated
Crystal Arthritis - the big toe has deposits of microscopic crystals of sodium urate
Joint Infection - bacteria contaminate the fluid inside the joint, usually found in the hip, shoulder and knee
Cartilage Degeneration - usually found in the knees, neck, lower back, hips and fingers, this type of arthritis arises when the cartilage of the joint breaks down
Muscle Inflammation - muscle tissue becomes inflamed
Local Conditions - a local injury causes pain, such as tennis elbow
General Conditions - a condition characterized by generalized muscle pain and sleep disturbance.
Chiropractic is a remedial system that centers on the structure of the body. Daniel David Palmer gave the first chiropractic treatment in 1895. He derived the name chiropractic from the Greek CHEIR meaning hand, and PRAKTIKOS meaning practice or perform. Treatment is adapted to suit the age, build, pain levels and general health of the individual. Treatment schedules depend on whether your problem is acute or chronic, and on your age and general health.
The chiropractic treatment for arthritis depends on whether the practitioner is a straight or mixed chiropractor. The body is permitted to cure itself by straight chiropractors, who treat arthritis by working with the spine to correct subluxation and other imbalances. The mixed chiropractor will probably treat arthritis and other remedies such as acpupressure mixed with manipulation.
X-rays of many people in their 20's show that arthritis is not just an old age thing. Chiropractor Dr. Lynn Kelly has identified the number one cause of arthritis as being joints that aren't moving properly because of misalignments of the bones that form them. Your spine is a group of cylinder-shaped bones with knobs on the backs and side of each bone that fit into grooves in the neighboring vertebra, and a chiropractor can evaluate these joints for you.
Chiropractic adjustments are painless for most patients. Tiny pockets of gas are relieved from the joints when your vertebrae are adjusted, making a "popping" noise. Dozens of research studies have recognized the safety and helpfulness of chiropractic care. Chiropractors are also taught to identify when damage is outside of their scope of practice and will refer patients to the proper medical specialist if needed.
The small joints of the body can be damaged by rheumatoid arthritis, as with any joint in the body. One in five to one in three patients with RA have spinal involvement. If you're an RA patient with spinal involvement, you should not have chiropractic manipulation done, as it can cause your spinal instability to worsen.
by: Adam O'Connor
www.backhealthpro.com
Visit our arthritis / rheumatology section for the latest news on this subject.
MLA
15 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/57468.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/57468.php.
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Qualifications, Please?
posted by Dr. Brian McCarley Chiropractor on 28 Nov 2006 at 4:37 amThis article appears to be written by someone by the name of Adam O'Connor. However, Mr. O'Connor provides no credentials for his opinion presented in this piece. He does quote one chiropractor and the majority of the information in his article is accurate. However, there are several glaring errors in the information he presents.
First, of the eight "classes" of arthritis he describes, one is inaccurate, and three are not types of arthritis at all. Crystal arthritis (more accurately termed metabolic arthritis) is in fact a deposition of crystals in the joint, but it is neither limited to the big toe, nor is calcium urate the only crystalline culprit. The last three in his list (muscle inflammation, local conditions, and general conditions) are not types of arthritis. The one named condition he references in these three (tennis elbow) is NOT an arthritic condition, but rather a localized inflammation of a muscular attachment to the lateral epicondyle which is outside the elbow joint, and thus cannot be a joint inflammation.
Finally, Mr. O'Connor's OPINION on whether patients with rheumatoid arthritis should receive spinal adjustments truly makes me question what education he may have received. While RA can increase the laxity in joints, particularly those in the spine, this is typically found primarily in the upper cervical spine. To boot, Doctors of Chiropractic are highly trained to recognize these conditions and to screen for problems of increased joint laxity prior to delivering an adjustment that could harm their patients. Therefore, to dismiss the benefit a person may receive from spinal adjustments simply because they happen to have RA is a gross overgeneralization. That is tantamount to claiming that if someone has had a spinal fusion, they should not receive chiropractic adjustment because it could damage their fusion. Mr. O’Connor would do well to remember that there are 24 movable segments of the spine, and not all may be affected by either of these conditions. Therefore, each individual should be evaluated by their chiropractor to determine if spinal adjustment is appropriate for them.
While, as a chiropractor, I appreciate a piece being published in MNT that shines a positive light on what I and my colleagues do, it would behoove the author to do more thorough research in the future prior to publishing an opinion that is not well supported by fact.
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