Headaches (HA) can be tremendously disabling, forcing
sufferers away from work or play into a dark, quiet room to minimize any noise
and light that intensifies the pain. According to the National Headache
Foundation, there are over 45 million Americans who suffer from chronic,
re-occurring headaches, of which 28 million are of the migraine variety. Also,
approximately 20% of children and adolescents deal with headaches that can
interfere significantly with their daily routines. There are many different
types of headaches and many sub-types within the main categories. Here are a
few: Tension HA (also, called cervicogenic HA), migraine, mixed headache
syndrome (a mixture of migraine and tension HAs), cluster (less common but the
most severe), sinus headaches, acute headaches, hormone headaches, chronic
progressive headaches (traction or inflammatory HAs), and MANY more! Just
“GOOGLE” “headache classification” for the daunting list! Let’s take a look at
how chiropractic manages these headaches!
According to a study completed in
2005, a review of the published literature revealed good evidence that
intensity and frequency of HAs are indeed helped by chiropractic intervention.
They limited their review to cervicogenic headaches and spinal manipulation and
noted the need for larger scale studies. The well-respected Cochrane database
reported spinal manipulation (SM) as an effective treatment option with
short-term benefits similar to amitriptyline, a commonly prescribed medication
for migraine HA patients.
For cervicogenic HA, the combination
of neck exercises and SM was found to be effective in both the short- and
long-term, and SM was superior to massage or placebo (sham or “fake”
manipulation). Regarding the question of treatment frequency of SM plus up to
two modalities (heat and soft tissue therapy), a preliminary study found that
when comparing patients receiving one, three, or four visits per week for three
weeks, those receiving 9-12 treatments during the three weeks had the most
benefit. Regarding the questions, “what is affected by SM” and, “why does SM
work” for cervicogenic HA patients, a study describes the intimate relationship
between the upper cervical nerve roots (C1-3), the trigeminal (cranial nerve
V), the spinal accessory (cranial nerve XI), and the vascular system.
Inflammation within these structures and their relationship with the trapezius
and SCM muscles help us understand the “why” and “how” of SM and referred pain
pattern to the face and head in those with cervicogenic HAs. Realizing this is
a bit “technical”, feel free to GOOGLE these structures and you’ll appreciate
the close proximity they have to each other and how adjustments, or SM, applied
to the upper cervical spine can affect this region. It has also been reported
that SM and strengthening of the deep neck flexor muscles benefits the
cervicogenic HA patient. Many HA sufferers have combinations of symptoms
including dizziness, neck pain, concentration “fog”, fatigue, and others, which
were found to also respond to SM applied to the upper cervical spine. One study
reported a 36% reduction in pain killer medication use in a group of
cervicogenic headache patients receiving SM but no reduction in the patient
group receiving soft-tissue therapy. The list of research studies goes on and
on! So WHAT are you waiting for? TRY CHIROPRACTIC for your headache
management!!!
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