| Literature DB >> 35626212 |
Andrea Bernetti1,2, Raffaele La Russa3, Alessandro de Sire2,4, Francesco Agostini1, Stefania De Simone3, Giacomo Farì5, Giorgia Viola Lacasella6, Gabriele Santilli7, Stefania De Trane8, Michele Karaboue3, Pierangela Ruiu1, Massimiliano Mangone1, Massimiliano Leigheb9, Valter Santilli1, Pietro Fiore2,3,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cervical spine manipulations (CSM) have been performed for centuries and are a widely practiced intervention to manage cervical spine musculoskeletal disorders. We aimed to perform an overview of the literature concerning the effects and the adverse events of CSM in the Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (PRM) field with a forensic medicine perspective.Entities:
Keywords: cervical artery dissection; cervical spine manipulations; forensic medicine; manipulative therapy; rehabilitation; side effects; spine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35626212 PMCID: PMC9139983 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12051056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1PRISMA 2020 Flow Diagram.
Characteristics and summary of the analysed studies.
| Authors, Year | Type of Study | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| Milkkelsen et al., 2015 | Case report | Clinical case of a 37-year-old female developing–immediately after chiropractic CSM therapy–bilateral VAD. |
| Orsini et al., 2019 | Case report | Clinical case of 34-year-old women who underwent CSM by a chiropractor, followed by traumatic bilateral VAD, which resulted in vertebrobasilar stroke. |
| Tinel et al., 2008 | Case report | Clinical case of 34-year-old male who underwent a cervical manipulation followed–by an alternate syndrome–with a right sensory motor deficit, cerebellar and pyramidal syndrome, and left deficit of cranial nerves. |
| Jeong et al., 2018 | Case report | Clinical case of a patient which experienced a left posterior inferior cerebellar artery infarction and left VAD two weeks after a chiropractic CSM. |
| Horn, 1983 | Case report | Clinical case of a 34-year-old male patient who underwent chiropractic CSM for the treatment of persistent headache, dizziness, and neck stiffness, and who, immediately after the procedure, developed a locked-in syndrome. |
| Ke et al., 2016 | Case report | Clinical case of a 36-year-old male with a LIS consequent to bilateral VAD, developed after CSM. |
| Povlsen et al., 1987 | Case report | Clinical case of a 36-year-old female who, one day after chiropractic CSM, developed an incomplete locked-in syndrome. |
| Hufnagel et al., 1999 | Case series | Analysis of 10 cases of patients aged between 27 and 46 years which developed ischemic stroke secondary to vertebral or carotid artery dissection after chiropractic CSM. |
| Albuquerque et al., 2011 | Retrospective observational study | Examination of 13 cases of patients presenting dissection of cervical and cranial segments of vertebral and carotid arteries after few hours to days of chiropractic manipulations. |
| Reuter et al., 2006 | Retrospective observational study and survey | Analysis of the clinical pattern of 36 VAD cases associated to chiropractic neck manipulation reported over three years in Germany. |
| Haldeman et al., 2002 | Retrospective review | Retrospective review of 64 medical legal cases of stroke temporally associated with CSM. |
| Thiel et al., 2007 | Survey | The survey aimed to provide an estimate of the risk of serious and relatively minor adverse events following chiropractic CSM. |
| Cagnie et al., 2004 | Prospective observational survey | Investigation of frequency of complications following spinal manipulations, even verifying their predictability. |
| Cagnie et al., 2005 | Clinical trial | Cerebral blood flow changes investigation after CSM using 1-day split-dose Technetium 99 m–ethyl cysteinate dimer single photon emission computed tomography. |
Characteristics and summary and main findings of the analysed clinical studies.
| Authors, Year | Type of Study | Summary | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reuter et al., 2006 | Retrospective survey | Analysis of the clinical pattern of 36 VAD cases associated to chiropractic neck manipulation reported over three years in Germany. | Clinical symptoms consistent with VAD started in 55% of patients within 12 h after neck manipulation. |
| VAD diagnosis was done in most cases using digital subtraction angiography (DSA), magnetic resonance angiography (MRA), or duplex sonography. | |||
| 90% of patients admitted to hospital had focal neurological deficits (among these, 11% had reduced level of consciousness). | |||
| 50% of patients were discharged after 20 ± 14 days with focal neurological deficits, one patient died, and one was in a persistent vegetative state. | |||
| Risk factors associated with artery dissection were present in only 25% of patients. | |||
| Cagnie et al., 2004 | Prospective survey | Investigation of frequency of complications following spinal manipulations, even verifying their predictability. | Reactions to spinal manipulation may be relatively common but are benign in nature and of short duration. |
| Although it is difficult to label side effects as a risk, it is important to differentiate patients susceptible to side effects in order to inform them correctly. | |||
| Cagnie et al., 2005 | Prospective study | Cerebral blood flow changes investigation after CSM using 1-day split-dose Technetium 99 m–ethyl cysteinate dimer single photon emission computed tomography. | Cerebellar hypoperfusion may occur after CSM. This could explain headache, dizziness, or nausea experienced by certain people after CSM. |