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First Article
Brain Function and Chiropractic
Carrick FR
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Division of Post-Doctoral Education, Logan College of Chiropractic,
Chesterfield, MO, USA.
OBJECTIVE:
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To ascertain whether manipulation of the cervical spine is
associated with changes in brain function. DESIGN: Physiological cortical
maps were used as an integer of brain activity before and after
manipulation of the cervical spine in a large (500 subjects), double-blind
controlled study. SETTING: Institutional clinic Participants: Adult
volunteers.
INTERVENTION:
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Five hundred subjects were divided into six comparative groups and
underwent specific manipulation of the second cervical motion segment.
Blinded examiners obtained reproducible pre- and postmanipulative cortical
maps, which were subjected to statistical analysis. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
Brain activity was demonstrated by reproducible circumferential
measurements of cortical hemispheric blind-spot maps before and after
manipulation of the second cervical motion segment. Twelve null hypotheses
were developed. The critical alpha level was adjusted in accordance with
Bonferroni's theorem to .004 (.05 divided by 12) to reduce the likelihood
of wrongly rejecting the null hypothesis (i.e., committing a Type I error).
RESULTS:
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Manipulation of the cervical spine on the side of an enlarged
cortical map is associated with increased contralateral cortical activity
with strong statistical significance (p < .001). Manipulation of the
cervical spine on the side opposite an enlarged cortical map is associated
with decreased cortical activity with strong statistical significance (p <
.001).
Manipulation of the cervical spine was specific for changes in only one
cortical hemisphere with strong statistical significance (p < .001).
CONCLUSIONS: Accurate reproducible maps of cortical responses can be used
to measure the neurological consequences of spinal joint manipulation.
Cervical manipulation activates specific neurological pathways.
Manipulation of the cervical spine may be associated with an increase or a
decrease in brain function depending upon the side of the manipulation and
the cortical hemisphericity of a patient.
PMID: 9345682, MUID: 98005572
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