| What
is Chiropractic?
Chiropractic is a health care profession that focuses on
disorders of the musculoskeletal system and the nervous system,
and the effects of these disorders on general health.
Chiropractic care is used most often to treat
neuromusculoskeletal complaints, including but not limited to
back pain, neck pain, pain in the joint of the arms or legs and
headaches.
Doctors of Chiropractic - often
referred to as chiropractors or chiropractic physicians -
practice a drug-free, hands-on approach to health care that
includes patient examination, diagnosis and treatment.
Chiropractors have broad diagnostic skills and are also trained
to recommend therapeutic and rehabilitative exercises, as well
as to provide nutritional, dietary and lifestyle counseling.
The most common therapeutic
procedure performed by doctors of chiropractic is known as
"spinal manipulation", also called "chiropractic adjustment".
The purpose of manipulation is to restore joint mobility by
manually applying a controlled force into joints that have
become hypomobile - or restricted in their movement - as a
result of a tissue injury. Tissue injury can be caused by
a single traumatic event, such as improper lifting of a heavy
object, or through repetitive stresses, such as sitting in a
awkward position with poor spinal posture for an extended period
of time. In either case, injured tissues undergo physical
and chemical changes that can cause inflammation, pain, and
diminished function for the sufferer. Manipulation, or
adjustment of the affect joint and tissues, restores mobility,
thereby alleviating pain and muscle tightness, and allowing
tissues to heal.
Chiropractic adjustment rarely
causes discomfort. However, patients may sometimes
experience mild soreness or aching following treatment (as with
some forms of exercise) that usually resolves within 12 to 48
hours.
In many cases, such as lower back
pain, chiropractic care may be the primary method of treatment.
When other medical conditions exist, chiropractic care may
complement or support medical treatment by relieving the
musculoskeletal aspects associated with the condition.
Doctors of chiropractic may
assess patients through clinical examination, laboratory
testing, diagnostic imaging and other diagnostic interventions
to determine when chiropractic treatment is appropriate or when
it is not appropriate. Chiropractors will readily refer
patients to the appropriate health care provider when
chiropractic care in not suitable for the patient's condition,
or the condition warrants co-management in conjunction with
other members of the health care team.
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