| Literature DB >> 16359587 |
Heike Philippi1, Andreas Faldum, Angela Schleupen, Bianka Pabst, Tatjana Jung, Holger Bergmann, Imke Bieber, Christine Kaemmerer, Piet Dijs, Bernd Reitter.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to assess the therapeutic efficacy of osteopathic treatment in infants with postural asymmetry. A randomized clinical trial of efficacy with blinded videoscoring was performed. Sixty-one infants with postural asymmetry aged 6 to 12 weeks (mean 9wks) were recruited. Thirty-two infants (18 males, 14 females) with a gestational age of at least 36 weeks were found to be eligible and randomly assigned to the intervention groups, 16 receiving osteopathic treatment and 16 sham therapy. After a treatment period of 4 weeks the outcome was measured using a standardized scale (4-24 points). With sham therapy, five infants improved (at least 3 points), eight infants were unchanged (within 3 points), and three infants deteriorated (not more than -3 points); the mean improvement was 1.2 points (SD 3.5). In the osteopathic group, 13 infants improved and three remained unchanged; the mean improvement was 5.9 points (SD 3.8). The difference was significant (p=0.001). We conclude that osteopathic treatment in the first months of life improves the degree of asymmetry in infants with postural asymmetry.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16359587 DOI: 10.1017/S001216220600003X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Med Child Neurol ISSN: 0012-1622 Impact factor: 5.449