Vertebral Artery Dissection, Traumatic, Neck Pain
Conditions
Keywords
Chiropractic, Manipulation, Vertebrobasilar Artery
Brief summary
After lumbar pain, neck pain is the most common cause of patients needing chiropractic care; the second most common cause of spinal manipulation use (1). Manipulation and mobilization are commonly used by chiropractors, osteopaths and manipulative physiotherapists in the treatment of neck pain. Many studies show that the Activator instrument is also used for this purpose in the chiropractic profession (2) There are several published case reports that relate to neck manipulation to vertebral artery dissection and stroke. The prevailing theory is that the neck extension and / or rotation may damage the vertebral artery in the foramen transversarium, especially at the C1-C2 level (2). However, most cases of extracranial vertebral artery dissection are thought to be spontaneous (3). In the literature, there have been no studies investigating the effects of instrument-assisted spinal manipulation on vertebrobasilar and internal carotis arteries. the aim of this study to compare the effect of manual and instrumental spinal manipulation on blood flow parameters of vertebrobasilar and internal carotis arteries on healthy persons which have mechanical neck pain and asymptomatic in vertebrobasilar insufficiency test.
Interventions
GE LOGIQ S8 ultrasound machine was used to measure blood flow parameters in right and left a. carotis communis, a. carotis interna and a. vertebralis. All vessels were examined in the axial plane through their traces in the B-mode with a C6-15 MHz curvilinear matrix probe. Flow patterns and directions of vessels were then examined with Colour Doppler and it was determined whether there was any stenosis. Intimal thickness of a. carotis communis was measured by spectral doppler method. Measurements were recorded by visualizing the CCA at the supraclavicular level, the ICA carotid sinus (C4 level), and the VA at the V2 segment (C3-4 level), with less angle at 60 degrees. All measurements before and after the application were made at the same level. Immediately after manipulation, blood flow parameters were recorded as numerical data by the same physician again with Doppler USG of the relevant arteries.
Manipulation procedures were applied to C1 or C2 (atlas and axis) vertebrae once in each participant. The application to which vertebrae were applied was determined by the palpation method applied by the physiotherapist. Manual chiropractic manipulation for C1 vertebra was applied in sitting position, using the digit / atlas pull technique. This technique is applied with the contact of practitioner's middle finger to the posterior part of transverse process of atlas, and generate a rotation force between C1 and C2 vertebrae. The procedure was applied to C2 vertebra using the index / facet push technique in the supine position. This technique places pushing force in the direction of rotation between the C2-C3 vertebrae, placing the practitioner's index finger in contact with the posterior surface of the C2 facet joint.
Activator technique was applied to C1 or C2 (atlas and axis) vertebrae once in each participant. The application to which vertebrae were applied was determined by the palpation method applied by the physiotherapist. Instrumental spinal manipulation was applied with Activator V chiropractic instrument. For C1 vertebra, the procedure was applied in supine position, by placing the Activator device horizontally on the participant's atlas transverse process of the affected side and applying a pushing force in the medial direction. For C2 vertebra, the procedure was applied in prone position, by placing the Activator device in the relevant C2 pedicle-lamina junction of the participant's affected side and applying a pushing force in the anterior, superior and mild medial direction of movement of the facet joint.
Sponsors
Study design
Intervention model description
30 participants were divided into 2 groups. In the first group, participants were applied manual chiropractic manipulation, and in the second group, participants were applied instrumental chiropractic manipulation.
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
* Being between 20-40 years of age * Having non-specific mechanical neck pain for more than 3 months with symptoms provoked by neck postures, movements, or palpation * Willingly participating to the study * Signing the confirmation form.
Exclusion criteria
* Spinal root compression (radiculopathy) * Neurological symptoms like weakness and numbness in extremities and face, uncontrolled movements, abnormal gait, dizziness, undefined nausea/vomiting, swallowing and speaking difficulties * Acute inflammatory disease * Spontaneously vertebral artery dissection in family * Tested positive in premanipulative vertebrobasilar artery insufficiency test * Being on anticoagulant and antiaggregant medication.
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Change in Peak Systolic Velocity (PSV) | 1 minute | cm/s, measured in each group |
| Change in End Diastolic Velocity (EDV) | 1 minute | cm/s, measured in each group |
| Change in Resistive Index (RI) | 1 minute | The Formula: RI = (PSV- EDV) / PSV, it has no unit, measured in each group |
| Change in Volume Flow (VF) | 1 minute | ml/min, measured only for right and left vertebral arteries |
Countries
Turkey (Türkiye)