Bryans Roland, Descarreaux Martin, Duranleau Mireille, Marcoux Henri, Potter Brock, Ruegg Rick, Shaw Lynn, Watkin Robert, White Eleanor
Guidelines Development Committee Chair and Chiropractor, Private Practice, Clarenville, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.
J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2011 Jun;34(5):274-89. doi: 10.1016/j.jmpt.2011.04.008.
The purpose of this manuscript is to provide evidence-informed practice recommendations for the chiropractic treatment of headache in adults.
Systematic literature searches of controlled clinical trials published through August 2009 relevant to chiropractic practice were conducted using the databases MEDLINE; EMBASE; Allied and Complementary Medicine; the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; Manual, Alternative, and Natural Therapy Index System; Alt HealthWatch; Index to Chiropractic Literature; and the Cochrane Library. The number, quality, and consistency of findings were considered to assign an overall strength of evidence (strong, moderate, limited, or conflicting) and to formulate practice recommendations.
Twenty-one articles met inclusion criteria and were used to develop recommendations. Evidence did not exceed a moderate level. For migraine, spinal manipulation and multimodal multidisciplinary interventions including massage are recommended for management of patients with episodic or chronic migraine. For tension-type headache, spinal manipulation cannot be recommended for the management of episodic tension-type headache. A recommendation cannot be made for or against the use of spinal manipulation for patients with chronic tension-type headache. Low-load craniocervical mobilization may be beneficial for longer term management of patients with episodic or chronic tension-type headaches. For cervicogenic headache, spinal manipulation is recommended. Joint mobilization or deep neck flexor exercises may improve symptoms. There is no consistently additive benefit of combining joint mobilization and deep neck flexor exercises for patients with cervicogenic headache. Adverse events were not addressed in most clinical trials; and if they were, there were none or they were minor.
Evidence suggests that chiropractic care, including spinal manipulation, improves migraine and cervicogenic headaches. The type, frequency, dosage, and duration of treatment(s) should be based on guideline recommendations, clinical experience, and findings. Evidence for the use of spinal manipulation as an isolated intervention for patients with tension-type headache remains equivocal.
本文旨在为成人头痛的整脊治疗提供基于证据的实践建议。
通过MEDLINE、EMBASE、联合与补充医学、护理与联合健康文献累积索引、手法、替代和自然疗法索引系统、Alt HealthWatch、整脊文献索引以及Cochrane图书馆等数据库,对截至2009年8月发表的与整脊实践相关的对照临床试验进行系统文献检索。考虑研究结果的数量、质量和一致性,以确定总体证据强度(强、中、有限或矛盾)并制定实践建议。
21篇文章符合纳入标准并用于制定建议。证据强度未超过中等水平。对于偏头痛,推荐脊柱推拿以及包括按摩在内的多模式多学科干预措施来治疗发作性或慢性偏头痛患者。对于紧张型头痛,不推荐脊柱推拿用于治疗发作性紧张型头痛。对于慢性紧张型头痛患者,无法就是否使用脊柱推拿给出推荐。低负荷颅颈关节松动术可能有利于发作性或慢性紧张型头痛患者的长期管理。对于颈源性头痛,推荐脊柱推拿。关节松动术或颈深屈肌锻炼可能改善症状。对于颈源性头痛患者,联合使用关节松动术和颈深屈肌锻炼并没有始终如一的额外益处。大多数临床试验未涉及不良事件;即便涉及,也未出现不良事件或仅有轻微不良事件。
有证据表明整脊治疗,包括脊柱推拿,可改善偏头痛和颈源性头痛。治疗的类型、频率、剂量和持续时间应基于指南建议、临床经验和研究结果。将脊柱推拿作为紧张型头痛患者的单一干预措施的证据仍不明确。