Chiropractic Safety

ICA Review of Scientific Studies Highlights Chiropractic Safety

August 7, 2014, Falls Church, Virginia, US:  The International Chiropractors Association (ICA) has undertaken a review of the scientific and clinical literature addressing issues of the safety and effectiveness of chiropractic adjustive procedures and wishes to highlight the unique safety record enjoyed by the profession.  This is especially significant in light of frequents news stories, often from less than credible sources, that seek to link chiropractic procedures with some incidence of stroke.
 
“Medical researchers frequently misunderstand the critical differences between specific chiropractic adjustments and cervical adjustment,” said ICA President Dr. Michael S. McLean.  “Doctors of chiropractic are highly trained in the use of the adjustment, which is the specific and scientific application of directional force to facilitate the reduction of nerve interference. Manipulation is the forceful passive movement of a joint beyond its active limit of motion.  Since adjustment doesn't imply the use of precision, specificity or the correction of nerve interference, it is not synonymous with chiropractic adjustment.”   It is in this context that the ICA offers the following examples of compelling, credible research resources on the chiropractic safety issue:
 
·       A literature review published in the September 2013 issue of the International Journal of Clinical Practice and online atwww.medscape.com by P. Tuchin examined 18 studies discussing what the researchers termed "spinal manipulative therapy" (SMT) and stroke to determine if SMT was a causative or associative factor.  There have frequently been undocumented rumors of stroke following SMT. Reports not based upon any statistical evidence vary from 1 case in every 400,000 to 1 in 5.6 million. The prejudicial tendencies by some in the medical community toward chiropractic have created controversial, unjustified views of chiropractic SMT having a higher risk of stroke than other types of SMT.  
 
This literature review attempted to cut through the unfounded sensationalism and, "…assess any misconceptions or distortion of the results of studies on chiropractic and stroke."  This review noted that sixty percent of strokes occur due to an abnormal amount of lipids (cholesterol and/or fat) in the blood. Smoking, hypertension, obesity, cardiovascular disease, types 1 & 2 diabetes, atrial fibrillation, migraines, heavy drinking, infections, contraceptives, sleep apnea, illicit drug use, and other factors also put a person at higher risk for stroke.  Chiropractic adjustments or SMTs are not listed in the scientific literature as a major factor in stroke. The researcher Tuchin explained, "The evidence for causality of vertebral artery dissection from chiropractic is weak."
 
·       The Canadian Medical Association Journal(2001) reviewed the malpractice data from the Canadian Chiropractic Protective Association (CCPA) between 1988 and 1997 on stroke claims following Chiropractic treatment. Results showed that 134 million adjustments were performed and only 23 cases involved stroke. "This most recent study establishes such an extremely low degree of risk that patients can feel confident about the safety of neck adjustments performed by chiropractors," according to Paul Carey, DC, lead author of the study and president of the CCPA.    Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2001, 165(7) 905-8. 
         
·       A study published in the Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association found 13 documented cerebrovascular accidents occurring in chiropractic patients over a five-year period with some 50 million cervical adjustments performed. The author concluded that a reasonable estimate of risk was low at only one per 3 million neck adjustments. [i]
 
·       A review of more than a half-million treatments over a nine-year period at the Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College outpatient clinic found no incidents of strokes. ("Vertebral Artery Syndrome" published in the book "Upper Cervical Syndrome: chiropractic diagnosis and treatment).[ii]
 
Not a single case of vertebral artery stroke was found during a study which involved approximately 5 million cervical adjustments from 1965 to 1980 at the National College of Chiropractic Clinic in Chicago. [iii]
 
ICA understands the emotion, the complexity and the confusion that surrounds these issues at times but believes that the research and actuarial record on this matter demonstrate the exemplary safety record of the chiropractic profession, and, that chiropractic adjustments administered by licensed doctors of chiropractic pose no demonstrable, significant risk of stroke.
 
All health care professionals must make consumer and patient safety a paramount concern.  When the level of risk is quantifiable and significant, providers have a responsibility to offer that data to patients and potential patients.  What constitutes a significant level of risk is open to a diverse range of opinions and interpretations; however, to pinpoint risk requires that exact data on causality needs to be present.   That causality factor is simply not present and even the coincidental occurrence of injury from upper cervical procedures applied by chiropractors is exceptionally rare, perhaps no more than one per 3 million neck adjustments. 
 
ICA strongly supports full-spine care, including upper cervical procedures as clinically indicated.  ICA has come to this position on the basis of an extensive review of both the clinical research record, the outcomes and safety data over the past several decades and the teaching experience offered at chiropractic colleges and in the post-graduate process through ICA’s Council on Upper Cervical Care. 
 
 
 

 
[i] Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association, 1993; 37 (2): 104-6
 
[ii]  Upper Cervical Syndrome, Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1988 195-222
 
[iii]  Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics, 1980; 3: 213-19
 

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