Asthma
Chiropractic
gives some insight into the use of chiropractic in combating asthma.
Forty seven patients were observed for a two year period. They had
been medically diagnosed with persistent asthma ranging from mild
persistent in 11 cases, moderate persistent in 28 cases, to severe
persistent in 8 cases. The care rendered consisted of specific chiropractic
adjustments. The range of visits was from 14 to 44, with the average
being 26 during the study period.
All 47
of the study patients showed "a marked improvement ranging from
87 to 100 percent." Their symptoms improved as well as a decrease
in their usage of acute asthma attack medication. Even more impressive
was the fact that all of the patients in the study reported maintaining
their improvement after a two-year follow up.
Childhood
Asthma and Chiropractic
It is
estimated that up to 15 million people suffer from asthma. Of those,
14.8 million are children under the age of 18. In 1993 alone, there
were 198,000 hospitalizations for asthma. In that same sample year,
342 people under the age of 25 died due to this problem. In money
terms, the direct cost of managing a patient with severe asthma has
been
estimated at more than $18,000 per year.
ASTHMA
DRUGS AND SIDE EFFECTS
"The
traditional medical treatment for asthma is anti-inflammatory and
bronchodilator drugs. In some cases, treatment included syrups such
as Preventils, which is usually prescribed on a "taken as needed"
basis.
The combination
of the drugs above promotes drowsiness and may be habit forming. A
patient denied of medication feels they can not breathe properly without
it, thus becoming irritable. In some cases they become so irritable
that they bring on an asthma attack."
Source:
www.drmikekrantz.com/asthma.htm
From
the abstract Case review of a 6-year-old boy who has had asthma since
1991 and his condition since chiropractic intervention. Child was
prescribed aerosol inhalers (Beclovert and Vertolin) using them every
day, up to three times a day. Adjustments were delivered to the cervical,
thoracic and lumbar areas. Significant progress. Could run during
soccer games and almost never used his inhaler. Slept more soundly.
Hardly ever had bouts with mucous clogged nasal passages. Nasal inhalant
use stopped.
Source:
Asthma and chiropractic. Garde R. Chiropractic Pediatrics. Vol 1 No.3
Dec, 1994.
ASTHMA SPRAYS DON'T WORK
ASTHMA SHOTS INEFFECTIVE
Allergy
shots used as treatment of asthma in children appears to be ineffective.
Studies have proven there were no significant benefits with the shots
given to children with moderate to severe asthma. Dr. N. Franklin
Adkinson Jr., John Hopkins University
Nearly
40 million Americans -- 25% of the total population -- suffer from
asthma and other allergy diseases
Source:
The New England Journal of Medicine in February of 1992
FROM:
Foundation for Chiropractic Education and Research (FCER)
October
24, 2002 Des Moines, Iowa— Patients afflicted with asthma may benefit
from spinal manipulation in terms of symptoms, immunological capacity,
and endocrine effects, an audience was told on October 5 at the 9th
International Conference on Spinal Manipulation in Toronto. The investigative
team, headed by Ray Hayek, Ph.D., has been conducting a trial at 16
treatment centers in Australia involving 420 patients with an average
age of 46 in an effort to find out what effects spinal manipulation
has on symptoms, depression and anxiety, general health status, and
the levels of immunity as reflected by the concentrations of both
an immunoglobulin (IgA) and an immunosuppressant (cortisol). This
investigation draws from several references in the scientific literature
which suggest that different forms of manual therapy (including massage)
improve the symptomatology and lower cortisol levels in asthma patients.
Dr. Hayek
reported that only the patient group which underwent spinal manipulation
(by any of four commonly used manipulative treatment protocols) displayed
significant improvement in asthma symptoms and depression and anxiety
scores.
Simply
experiencing structured interviews at the treatment centers or being
monitored at home did not yield these improvements. In addition, patients
actually undergoing spinal manipulation displayed dramatic increases
of IgA and decreases of cortisol through the posttreatment period,
suggesting that there were physiological consequences to their manipulative
treatments reflecting increased immunological capacities which would
be expected to ward off subsequent asthmatic attacks.
These
biochemical changes not only suggest that the effects of spinal manipulation
are more far-reaching than commonly believed, but that they may be
more long-term as well. The gain in immunological capacity achieved
with the simultaneous loss of the immunosuppressant cortisol and the
increase of the immunoglobulin IgA following spinal manipulation would
be expected to reduce the incidence and severity of pathogenic invasion
of the airways. There would be less of a risk under these circumstances
of compounding the symptoms of asthma.
The immunosuppressing
mechanism of glucocorticoids is believed to occur by their reducing
the permeability of capillaries, decreasing the migration of white
blood cells in inflamed areas, suppressing the release of interleukins,
and inhibiting the production of proteolytic enzymes by stabilizing
the lysosomal membranes which release them.
This
followed contacts that the Director of Research at FCER was able to
make with the Australian research community in 1995, taking into consideration
the expertise of the investigative team as well as the fact that Australia's
2 million asthma sufferers have given the Island Continent the dubious
distinction of being the asthma capital of the world.
It has
been carried out with the support of research grants exceeding a quarter
of a million dollars from both the Foundation for Chiropractic Education
and Research (FCER) and the National Chiropractic Mutual Insurance
Company (NCMIC). This research, which may be highly influential on
the future of the chiropractic profession, is still in need of funding.
To contribute to this important project, please call FCER at 800-637-6244,or
donate via the Foundation's secure website at: https://www.fcer.org:448/html/asthma_donate.asp
This
research represents one of approximately 50 projects administered
by FCER since 1990 in the effort to document both the theory and practice
of chiropractic to increase its effective integration into healthcare
systems worldwide. The conference at which these results were presented
is an international forum which FCER has sponsored at different locations
worldwide for the past 14 years.