| Literature DB >> 22348431 |
Paul E Dougherty1, Cheryl Hawk, Debra K Weiner, Brian Gleberzon, Kari Andrew, Lisa Killinger.
Abstract
There are a rising number of older adults; in the US alone nearly 20% of the population will be 65 or older by 2030. Chiropractic is one of the most frequently utilized types of complementary and alternative care by older adults, used by an estimated 5% of older adults in the U.S. annually. Chiropractic care involves many different types of interventions, including preventive strategies. This commentary by experts in the field of geriatrics, discusses the evidence for the use of spinal manipulative therapy, acupuncture, nutritional counseling and fall prevention strategies as delivered by doctors of chiropractic. Given the utilization of chiropractic services by the older adult, it is imperative that providers be familiar with the evidence for and the prudent use of different management strategies for older adults.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22348431 PMCID: PMC3306193 DOI: 10.1186/2045-709X-20-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Man Therap ISSN: 2045-709X
Treatment considerations for older adults [4]
| Patient characteristic | Treatment modification |
|---|---|
| Small body size; increased frailty | Decrease biomechanical force |
| Severe osteoporosis and/or other bone diseases such as infection or cancer. | High-force manipulation is contraindicated |
| Anticoagulation or corticosteroid medication | Soft tissue or other manual procedures which compress tissues are either contraindicated or should be used with caution and decreased biomechanical force. |
| Fear or anxiety related to manipulation, or preference for type of procedure | Adapt manipulation and soft tissue procedures to optimize patient comfort |
Acupuncture and related modalities for the treatment of CLBP
| Modality | Indications | Contraindications (relative) | Potential Adverse Effects |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Chinese Acupuncture (TCA) | Insufficient clinical trials evidence to recommend for older adults with CLBP | • Bleeding diathesis | • Bleeding, bruising |
| Percutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (PENS) | CLBP in older adults; minimum effective dose of electrical stimulation unknown | As with TCA | As with TCA |
| Auricular acupuncture | Insufficient clinical trials evidence to recommend for older adults with CLBP; theoretically useful for augmenting corporeal treatments. | • Bleeding diathesis | As with TCA |
| Trigger point deactivation | Myofascial pain; local twitch response is essential therapeutic element (ref). May be combined with other acupuncture modalities, e.g., following PENS for recalcitrant localized pain. | As with TCA | As with TCA; as compared with TCA and PENS, trigger point deactivation may be painful. |
| Deep intramuscular electrical stimulation | Localized myofascial pathology (e.g., piriformis, erector spinae); may be performed in addition to TCA or PENS for recalcitrant localized myofascial pain. | As with TCA | As with TCA |