An investigation of the interrelationship between manipulative therapy-induced hypoalgesia and sympathoexcitation


Autoria(s): Vicenzino, B; Collins, D; Benson, H; Wright, A
Data(s)

01/01/1998

Resumo

Objective: To investigate a proposed model in which manipulative therapy produces a treatment-specific initial hypoalgesic and sympathoexcitatory effect by activating a descending pain inhibitory system. The a priori hypothesis tested was that manipulative therapy produces mechanical hypoalgesia and sympatho-excitation beyond that produced by placebo or control. Furthermore, these effects would be correlated, thus supporting the proposed model. Design: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, repeated-measures study of the initial effect of treatment. Setting: Clinical neurophysiology laboratory. Subjects: Twenty-four subjects (13 women and 11 men; mean age, 49 yr) with chronic lateral epicondylalgia (average duration, 6.2 months). Intervention: Cervical spine lateral glide oscillatory manipulation, placebo and control. Outcome Measures: Pressure pain threshold, thermal pain threshold, pain-free grip strength test, upper limb tension test 2b, skin conductance, pileous and glabrous skin temperature and blood flux. Results: Treatment produced hypoalgesic and sympathoexcitatory changes significantly grater than those of placebo and control (p < .03). Confirmatory factor-analysis modeling, which was performed on the pain-related measures and the indicators of sympathetic nervous system function, demonstrated a significant correlation (r = .82) between the latencies of manipulation-induced hypoalgesia and sympathoexcitation. The Lagrange Multiplier test and Wald test indicated that the two latent factors parsimoniously and appropriately represented their observed variables. Conclusions: Manual therapy produces a treatment-specific initial hypoalgesic and sympathoexcitatory effect beyond that of placebo or control. The strong correlation between hypoalgesic and sympathoexcitatory effects suggests that a central control mechanism might be activated by manipulative therapy.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:35113

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Health Care Sciences & Services #Integrative & Complementary Medicine #Rehabilitation #Chiropractic Manipulation #Confirmatory Factor Analysis #Elbow #Pain #Physical Therapy #Sympathetic Nervous System #Periaqueductal Gray #Lateral Epicondylalgia #Spinal Manipulation #Morphine Analgesia #Cervical-spine #Cell Groups #Hairy Skin #Neurons #Pain #Responses
Tipo

Journal Article