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What
is Chiropractic?
Chiropractic is a hands-on, holistic, alternative
health care approach to better health and increased
livelihood through diet, exercise and (of course)
manipulation of the spine and extremities. We are
considered to be the neuromusculoskeletal (nerve-muscle-skeleton)
professionals. Chiropractic is a lifestyle of health
care.
How can Chiropractic
help me?
Chiropractic can help you by working with you
and your other healthcare professionals (M.D.,
and D.O.) by maintaining your spine in proper
alignment. Every organ in the body is under some
sort of neurological (nerve) control, so doesn’t
it make sense that if nerve impulses do not get
to the organ its function will be compromised!
Not all nerve impulses have a stimulatory effect
on organs; some nerve impulses inhibit the organs
they influence. For example, the Vagus Nerve has
an inhibitory effect on the heart causing the
heart to slow its rate when it receives these
signals. The same Vagus Nerve, however, on the
stomach and digestive tract stimulates these organs
into increasing their activity. Through manipulation
of the spine, the Chiropractor helps place the
spine in proper alignment to prevent a malfunction
of nerve impulses to other organs and tissues.
What is an adjustment?
The adjustment (also known as manipulation)
is a high velocity, low amplitude thrust given
into a specific joint in order to provide a therapeutic
result. This is not to say, however, that all
manipulations are the same. Just as Chiropractors
are different individually, so are our many techniques.
A particular technique that I might use and feel
comfortable with may feel odd or uncomfortable
to another Chiropractor and vice versa.
Does the adjustment
hurt?
The adjustment can sometimes cause some minor
discomfort, but it is not usually considered painful.
Most of this discomfort will go away after the
adjustment is performed several times. That
is why several adjustments may be necessary
before total relief is seen. Lets face the truth,
you wouldn’t expect to take just one of
the twenty pills of any prescription to get relief, you shouldn’t expect only one adjustment
to do the same. Just as you were given twenty
pills to relieve the symptoms of your illness, you may have to have
four, five or even more adjustments to do the
same!
The discomfort that you may feel is very often
related to how long you waited before you sought
treatment for your pain or illness. The sooner
we can start the adjustments after onset, the
less discomfort you will feel and the fewer treatments
you will need for your continued good health.
Is Chiropractic adjustment
dangerous?
I will ask you this question, is medicine dangerous?
There are fewer documented cases of injuries each
year from adjustment per year than from mis-prescribed
drugs, drug overdose, bad drug combinations and
treatments in the medical profession. Sure we
sometimes see (and all too often) a newspaper
article in which a person was injured by a chiropractic-like
manipulation. If you read further into the story
you will probably see that it was a friend of
the individual or the individual that delivered
the injury and not a trained Chiropractor. We
as Chiropractic students practice and perform
hundreds to thousands of adjustments before
we ever deliver them to a patient in need. We
practice and critique each other while in school
in order to ensure we are more than capable of
performing them on you, the patient.
The most often notable symptom of the adjustment
is a cavitation (a pop or click sound) which is
often heard and or felt by the patient as a result
of the adjustment. This cavitation is the result
of rapid release of air bubbles within the joint
that have been under pressure, much like the opening
of a carbonated soda can. The cavitation occurs
more often than not, but it does not have to occur
for the adjustment to be effective.
Do you mean that Chiropractors
do not prescribe any pills?
No, we do, at times; our patients take recommend
pills. The pills we recommend, however, are high
quality vitamins, minerals and other supplements
that our body needs in order to maintain proper
health. At times we may prescribe herbs such as
Echinacea, feverfew, garlic, milk thistle and
others to aid the body in its attempt to cure
and heal itself. We do not condemn the use of
all pills, we just prefer to go to the primary
source of all medicines - Mother Nature - for
our help.
I heard that Chiropractic
was a correspondence course, is this true?
I have heard the same comment also and it is totally
NOT TRUE. Just like medical school, Chiropractic
College requires certain prerequisites to enter.
In college I studied along and right beside many
individuals who entered Medical, Osteopathic,
Optometry and Dental school while I entered Chiropractic
College. We as Chiropractors have taken the same
prerequisite courses as the other health care
professionals in our pursuit to help you achieve
better health. The only difference is once we
enter Chiropractic our goal is different. We still
take many of the classes that other health care
professionals in Chiropractic College, but we
also spend time in the specialized study of Chiropractic.
The decision to study Chiropractic, for most
students, is determined by the fact that they
want to be more involved in hands on approach
with their patients than other health care professionals.
Let’s face the facts, how often do you go
to see the M.D. and he places his or her hands
on you or palpates joints for pain or tenderness
or checks for joint motion? How often does he
ask a few questions and then prescribes a magic
pill to cure your illness? Are you satisfied with
that treatment?
If the answers to the above questions are seldom,
always, and no (in order), then give Chiropractic
a try! You may find you are more satisfied with
your decision to see the Chiropractor first next
time you need professional help.
How does chiropractic adjustment work?
This is a very complicated question to answer
from the physiological view. To keep things as
simple as possible, we Chiropractors explain the
principle as a garden hose. Consider the hose
to be a nerve and the water flowing through the
hose as nerve impulses. When the hose is laid
out straight without any kinks, water is allowed
to flow freely and uninhibited through the hose.
If on the other hand we kink or park a car on
the hose, water flow is reduced or even stops
flowing through the hose. If this condition persists
long enough, eventually, the hose will become
damaged (pain).
By performing the adjustment early on, we remove
the kink, allow for free water flow and begin
to make plans to save the hose from further damage.
This in turn allows us many more years of valuable
use to others and ourselves.
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