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The mechanism of back pain relief by spinal manipulation relies on decreased temporal summation of pain 2017 | Forum

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Admin Aug 22 '18
Christopher Randoll, Vincent Gagnon-Normandin, Jessica Tessier, Suzie Bois, Nabi Rustamov, Julie O'Shaughnessy, Martin Descarreaux, Mathieu Piché,


The mechanism of back pain relief by spinal manipulation relies on decreased temporal summation of pain,

Neuroscience,
Volume 349,
2017,

Pages 220-228,


ISSN 0306-4522,

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2017.03.006.
(http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S030645221730163X)


Abstract: The aim of the present study was to determine whether thoracic spinal manipulation (SM) decreases temporal summation of back pain. The study comprised two controlled experiments including 16 and 15 healthy participants, respectively. Each study included six sessions during which painful or non-painful electrical stimulations were delivered in three conditions: (1) control (2) light mechanical stimulus (MS) or (3) SM. Electrical stimulation was applied on the thoracic spine (T4), in the area where SM and MS were performed.


In Experiment 1, electrical stimulation consisted in a single 1-ms pulse while a single or repeated train of ten 1-ms pulses was used in Experiment 2. SM involved articular cavitation while MS was a calibrated force of 25N applied manually for 2s. For the single pulse, changes in pain or tactile sensation in the SM or MS sessions compared with the CTL session were not significantly different (all p’s>0.05). In contrast, temporal summation of pain was decreased in the SM session compared with the CTL session for both the single and repeated train (p’s<0.05). Changes were not significant for the MS sessions (all p’s>0.05) and no effect was observed for the tactile sensation (all p’s>0.1).


These results indicate that SM produces specific inhibitory effects on temporal summation of back pain, consistent with the involvement of a spinal anti-nociceptive mechanism in clinical pain relief by SM. This provides the first mechanistic evidence of back pain relief by spinal manipulation.

Keywords: spine; vertebral; manual therapy; back pain; chiropractic


https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S030645221730163X


cliff
cliff Aug 22 '18

I think this is important basic science research, although this study could have been better written. Perhaps the whole article explains more (as to WHY this all happens). Again said: it is important to explain the mechanism, even though hypothetical, along with the results.  Explaining HOW it works is just as important as showing THAT is works. This is a basic science tenant. But maybe we should see the whole article and not just the abstract.

Here is an explanation of 'temporal summation'

"Temporal summation is a term that pain researchers use to refer to how people perceive pain when painful (noxious) stimuli are repeatedly applied. Studies have shown that people suffering from fibromyalgia, chronic pelvic pain, tempormandibular joint disorder, and other conditions that cause chronic pain, often have a greater degree of temporal summation, or heightened sensitivity to pain." https://med.stanford.edu/...mporalSummation.html




The Forum post is edited by cliff Aug 22 '18
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