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Celebrating
over 50 years in the Natural Healing Arts, blending science with
natural healing
Chiropractic Care Aids Hypertension
- Note - For decades, Chiropractors
have been urging people to have their spines checked and
straightened to restore proper nerve function to the major organs
and the entire neurological system of the body. The KEY vertebra in
the recovery of full physical health is quite often the atlas. I
have personally seen miraculous results from PROPER atlas
adjustments in many, many people over a long period of time. This is
the FIRST newspaper story I have ever seen in the main stream media
which discusses this essential aspect of chiropractic spinal
alignment and health. In fact, there are people in mental
hospitals and probably hundreds of thousands, or millions, who are
on medication - pain and psychotropic - who are suffering from
nothing more than a misaligned atlas vertebra. Among many serious
problems, an atlas out of alignment can cause a loss of not only
blood circulation to the brain and cause blood pressure issues but it
can restrict the flow and pressure of cerebrospinal
fluid.
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- Caution: PROPER ATLAS (C-1)
ADJUSTMENT REQUIRES ADVANCED SKILL. There are, unfortunately,
relatively few chiropractors who are truly competent at
PROPERLY adjusting the atlas. It is such a delicate and important
adjustment that some chiropractors specialize in only atlas
adjustments. Do some research and consult with several chiropractors
if you suspect you might have an atlas issue. One easy way to get a
quick read is to have someone put an thumb and index finger on each
side of the spine at the base of the skull. If there is soreness or
pain, you may have an atlas out of place. If so, by all means, visit
a good, qualified chiropractor for a consultation. -ed (rense.com)
-
- By Terri Yablonsky Stat
Special to the Chicago Tribune,
May 8, 2007
-
- A one-time chiropractic adjustment
of a misaligned neck vertebra has been shown to significantly reduce
blood pressure in people with hypertension, according to a pilot
study by University of Chicago researchers.
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- When the vertebra, known as the
Atlas, or C1, was manipulated in 25 people with high blood pressure,
both their systolic and diastolic readings decreased significantly,
equal to taking two blood-pressure drugs at once.
-
- High blood pressure, or
hypertension, is defined in an adult as a systolic pressure of 140
or higher and/or a diastolic pressure of 90 or higher. The mean
blood pressure of those who had the adjustment was 147 systolic
before adjustment and 129.8 systolic after. The mean diastolic
reading was 92.5 before adjustment and 82.3 after.
-
- For years anecdotal reports have
linked blood pressure and neck pain, according to the study's lead
author, Dr. George Bakris, director of the hypertension center at
the University of Chicago Medical Center. He and his team decided to
put the hypothesis to the test after he was approached by family
practitioner Dr. Bruce Bell of Barrington, who has been interested
in this phenomenon for years.
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- The Atlas vertebra, which lies high
in the neck, is not anchored like other vertebrae, so it easily
slips out of alignment. It relies solely on muscles and ligaments to
stay in place. The vertebra also can become displaced without pain
and often goes undetected and untreated.
-
- Problem long recognized
-
- "Even back in the 1960s and
'70s, neurosurgeons and some specialized chiropractors knew that
things change when you realign C1," Bakris said. "But
there has not been the rigor of the scientific method applied to see
what's going on. We wanted to find out if this effect lasts longer
than a week or two."
-
- Enough chiropractic specialists were
aware of the phenomenon to limit their practice to manual alignment
of C1. They make up the National Upper Cervical Chiropractic
Association. It was a Chicago member of the association, Marshall
Dickholtz Sr., to whom patients with high blood pressure and
misaligned C1 were sent for the study. Half the patients received a
tailor-made adjustment; half received a "sham
intervention." Patients were assessed after the alignment as
well as at the end of eight weeks.
-
- "We were shocked to find out
that we got more than double what we expected in blood pressure
reduction," Bakris said. Patients did not need to resume taking
blood pressure medicine. The effect lasted for months.
-
- Wide-ranging effects
-
- People with a misaligned Atlas
vertebra have leg-length disparities that are noticeable when the
person lies down and their heel positions are compared. When
patients turn their head to the left or right, their heel position
changes. If the heels do not appear parallel to one another or
change on head-turning, the Atlas is misaligned.
-
- "There's a lot of nerve traffic
through that area," Bakris said. "We have to figure out
why it's happening."
-
- akris and his team are working with
the National Institutes of Health and General Electric to develop a
proposal to study changes in blood flow at the base of the brain and
changes in neurotransmitters possibly related to serotonin. These
changes could result in a lack of blood flow involving the Atlas
misalignment. Realignment results in higher levels of serotonin and
less nerve traffic.
-
- Study results mean that people with
Stage 1 hypertension who are in their 40s and 50s may be freed from
blood pressure medication for a time. Older patients on three or
four medications may be able to reduce their pill count.
-
- Dr. Chuck Woodfield, a chiropractic
research- er in Bellingham, Wash., was part of the research team.
-
- "We need to do more research to
understand why this effect occurs," Woodfield said. "It'll
be at least five years before we can get the actual mechanism inside
the brain.
-
- "When the Atlas misaligns, you
get cascaded effects. There are changes in posture and the way blood
flows to the brain stem. This sets up an inflammatory process. When
you adjust the Atlas, posture comes back to somewhat normal and
inflammation decreases. It improves overall health. I don't know if
it's a cure-all. It's just one study, and we need to do a multisite
study and look at minority populations."
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- ctc-tempo@tribune.com
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- Copyright © 2007, Chicago Tribune
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http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/health/chi-0705041135may08,1,1678537.story
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