| Literature DB >> 31139346 |
Mégane Pasquier1,2, Catherine Daneau3, Andrée-Anne Marchand1, Arnaud Lardon2,4,5, Martin Descarreaux3.
Abstract
Introduction: The burden of musculoskeletal disorders increases every year, with low back and neck pain being the most frequently reported conditions for seeking manual therapy treatment. In recent years, manual therapy research has begun exploring the dose-response relationship between spinal manipulation treatment characteristics and both clinical and physiological response to treatment. Objective: The purpose of this scoping review was to identify and appraise the current state of scientific knowledge regarding the effects of spinal manipulation frequency and dosage on both clinical and physiological responses.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical response; Dosage; Frequency; Scoping review; Spinal manipulation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31139346 PMCID: PMC6530068 DOI: 10.1186/s12998-019-0244-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Man Therap ISSN: 2045-709X
Fig. 1Flowchart diagram. CGH: Cervicogenic Headache; LBP: Low back pain; LSS: Lumbar Spinal Stenosis; LDS: Lumbar Decompression Surgery
Fig. 2Number of included studies per peer-reviewed journal
Cochrane Risk of bias tool assessment of randomized control trials
Summary of the SM dose-physiological response relationship in human studies. (N=Newton)
| Studies | Dosage parameters | Spine level | Sample size | Outcomes measures | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Thrust forces: | L4 | N = 4 | PAIN PRESSURE THRESHOLD | ● NO DIFFERENCES |
| [ | Thrust forces: | L5 | N = 30 | ● NO DIFFERENCES | |
| Thrust durations: | |||||
| [ | Thrust durations: | L3 | N = 19 | ● NO DIFFERENCES | |
| [ | Thrust durations: | L1 to L3 | N = 30 | ● NO DIFFERENCES | |
| [ | Thrust forces: | L1 to L3 | N = 4 | MUSCULAR RESPONSE AMPLITUDE | ● Data suggest higher responses with maximum thrust force setting |
| [ | Thrust forces: | Bilateral PSIS, sacrum, S1 and L5, L4, L2, T12 and T8 | N = 40 | ● Increase after SM treatment | |
| ● SMT showed a greater increasing than control group and sham treatment | |||||
| [ | Preload forces: | T6 to T8 | N = 23 | ● Decrease during preload | |
| ● Increase during thrust | |||||
| [ | Combination of thrust forces / thrust durations: | T6 to T8 | N = 25 | ● NO DIFFERENCES | |
| [ | Thrust forces: | T6,T8 | N = 26 | ● Increase in thrust phase and resolution phase | |
| [ | Thrust forces: | L3 | N = 51 | ● Increase with increasing thrust force | |
| [ | Thrust forces: | L1 to L3 | N = 4 | VERTEBRAL DISPLACEMENT | ● Data suggest an increase when greater force is applied |
| [ | Thrust forces: | L3 to S2 | N = 9 | ● Increase with increasing thrust force | |
| [ | Thrust forces: 19,5 N,190 N | Bilateral PSIS, sacrum, S1 and L5, L4, L2, T12 and T8 | N = 40 | ●increase after any treatment | |
| ●SMT showed a greater increasing than control group and sham treatment | |||||
| [ | Preload forces: | T6 to T8 | N = 23 | ●Linear decrease with force during thrust phase ● Increase in preload phase with increasing preload | |
| [ | Combination of thrust forces / thrust durations: | T6 to T8 | N = 25 | ● Increase in thrust phase with increasing thrust force | |
| [ | Thrust durations: | T7,T8 | N = 20 | ● NO DIFFERENCES |
Summary of the SM dose-physiological response relationship in animal studies
| Studies | Dosage parameters | Sample size | Spine level | Muscle spindle activity - main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Thrust forces: 25, 55, 85% of BW | L6 | ● Consistent increase in MIF for 1 mm thrust amplitude. | |
| Thrust displacements: 1, 2 or 3 mm | ●No specific trend associated to modulation in forces and displacements | |||
| Thrust durations: 0,25,50,75,100,150,200, 250 ms | ||||
| [ | Thrust forces: 33, 66, 100% of BW | L6 | ●Data suggest that decreasing thrust duration increases | |
| Thrust duration: 25, 50, 100, 200, 400 or 800 ms | ● There is a threshold effect for duration for which the discharge greatly increases | |||
| [ | Thrust displacement: 1 or 2 mm | L6 | ● Data suggest that decreasing thrust duration increases | |
| Thrust duration: 12.5, 25, 50, 100, 200, 400 ms | ||||
| ● Peak thrust amplitude (1 mm compared to 2 mm) influence | ||||
| [ | Thrust forces: 25, 55, 85% of BW | L6 | ● Data suggest that decreasing thrust duration increases mean spindle discharge through range of forces. | |
| Thrust displacement: 1, 2 or 3 mm | ● Through a range of force durations, increasing force seems to increase | |||
| Thrust durations: 25, 50, 75, 100, 200, 250 ms | ● For most thrust duration, peak thrust displacement did not influence | |||
| ● Increasing force rates increased MIF | ||||
| [ | Thrust force: ranges from 68 N to 122 N | L7 | ● Data suggest that increasing force leads to increase | |
| [ | Preload variation: 18% or 43% of thrust force | L6 | ● Increasing longer preload duration (4 s compared to 1 s) increases | |
| Thrust durations: 1 or 4 s (Thrust force: 55% of BW) | ||||
| ● A smaller magnitude of preload (18% compared to 43%) increases | ||||
| ● The highest preload magnitude and longest duration led to a significantly greater mean decrease in resting spindle discharge | ||||
| [ | Thrust force: 22 N, 44 N or 67 N | L6 | ● Data suggest that increase in force increased the time required until the first action potential. |
MIF Mean Instantaneous Frequency, ΔMIF Changes in Mean Instantaneous Frequency, BW body of weight