Manual therapy
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The two vertebral arteries are usually unequal in size, the left one being generally larger than the right one. It is not clear why this asymmetry exists. ⋯ No correlation between differences in vertebral artery diameter and hand dominance was found. Hence, the hypothesis that a dominant left vertebral artery is associated with right-handedness and vice versa cannot be confirmed.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Effects of a manual therapy technique in experimental lateral epicondylalgia.
In patients with lateral epicondylalgia, mobilization-with-movement (MWM) is used as an intervention aimed at achieving analgesia and enhancing grip force, although the mechanisms underlying these effects are unclear. The present study investigated the acute sensory and motor effects of an MWM intervention in healthy controls with experimentally induced lateral epicondylalgia. Twenty-four subjects were randomly allocated to either a MWM or a placebo group (n=12). ⋯ Moreover, both groups experienced a significant increase in muscle soreness (3.9+/-0.2; P<0.0001) at Day 1 compared to pre-exercise. During saline-induced pain and in response to intervention, there were no significant between-group differences in VAS profiles, pain distributions, induced deep tissue hyperalgesia or force attenuation. These data suggest that the lateral glide-MWM does not activate mechanisms associated with analgesia or force augmentation in subjects with experimentally induced features simulating lateral epicondylalgia.
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Controlled Clinical Trial
Clinical tests of musculoskeletal dysfunction in the diagnosis of cervicogenic headache.
Persistent intermittent headache is a common disorder and is often accompanied by neck aching or stiffness, which could infer a cervical contribution to headache. However, the incidence of cervicogenic headache is estimated to be 14-18% of all chronic headaches, highlighting the need for clear criterion of cervical musculoskeletal impairment to identify cervicogenic headache sufferers who may benefit from treatments such as manual therapy. This study examined the presence of cervical musculoskeletal impairment in 77 subjects, 27 with cervicogenic headache, 25 with migraine with aura and 25 control subjects. ⋯ Sternocleidomastoid normalized EMG values were higher in the latter three stages of the cranio-cervical flexion test although they failed to reach significance. There were no between group differences for other measures. A discriminant analysis revealed that manual examination could discriminate the cervicogenic headache group from the other subjects (migraine with aura and control subjects combined) with an 80% sensitivity.