Index to Chiropractic Literature
Index to Chiropractic Literature
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ID 20755
  Title Improvement in radiographic measurements, posture, pain & quality of life in non-migraine headache patients undergoing upper cervical chiropractic care: A retrospective practice based study
URL http://www.vertebralsubluxationresearch.com
Journal J Vert Sublux Res. 2009 ;Jun(4):Online access only pp. 1-11
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Subject(s)
Peer Review Yes
Publication Type Article
Abstract/Notes Background: There is research supporting nociceptive structures in the cervical spine as a common origin for symptoms meeting International Headache Society diagnostic criteria for tension-type headache and cervicogenic headache. The potential to screen non-migraine headache subjects for referral based on posture, and to have that referral meet with a high level of success, is important to health care and to headache research.

Objective: To determine if signs of postural imbalance and X-rays provide measurable indicators of cervical disarrangement related to non-migraine headaches and to determine the effectiveness in everyday practice of manual vectored adjustment of the atlas for attenuation of non-migraine headache pain intensity.

Methods: Progression of patients with non-migraine headache following manual, vectored-adjustment of the atlas was assessed by and correlated with pre- to post- adjustment changes in measurements from cervical radiographs, wellness and pain scale instruments, and load and non-load bearing modes of posture. Time-series analysis of VAS scores on patients who were adjusted once is fit to an exponential decay curve.

Results: There was statistically significant improvement in postural measurement, X-ray measurements, and in all wellness categories from pre-treatment to post-treatment. Time series analysis of the visual analog pain scale assessments showed a significant reduction in pain intensity within two weeks of treatment for those who received only a single treatment and that the pain intensity for the single-treatment group decreased by approximately 75 percent over the study period.

Conclusion: Correction of the atlas subluxation complex using National Upper Cervical Chiropractic Association (NUCCA) protocol may be a possible analgesic for non-migraine- especially cervicogenic- headache.

This abstract is reproduced with the permission of the publisher; full text by subscription.


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