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Address correspondence to Michael L. Kuchera, DO, FAAO, Professor and Director, OMM Research, Clinical Director, Center for Chronic Disorders of Aging, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, 4190 City Ave, Suite 320, Philadelphia, PA 19130-1633. E-mail: MichaelKuc{at}pcom.edu
Osteopathic manipulative medicine (OMM) is a physician-directed approach to patient care that incorporates diagnostic and therapeutic strategies to address body unity issues, enhance homeostatic mechanisms, and maximize structure-function interrelationships. Osteopathic physicians integrate a thorough medical history with palpatory examination of a patient to ascertain distinctive characteristics and origins of the patient's pain, to evaluate how pain uniquely affects the patient, and to determine whether segmental, reflex, or triggered pain phenomena coexist in the patient. Osteopathic manipulative medicine expands differential diagnoses by allowing the physician to consider somatic dysfunction and implement treatment options via integration of specific aspects of complementary care into state-of-the-art pain management practices.
Prescriptions formulated through an OMM algorithm integrate each osteopathic tenet with biopsychosocial and patient education models, as well as manual medicine, pharmacologic, and rehabilitation techniques proportionate to individual needs. This "refreshed" version of an article originally published in September 2005 includes the addition of an anecdotal case scenario in which application of osteopathic principles and practice created a personalized, effective treatment plan for the described patient's chronic pain.
Dissatisfied with ineffective, incomplete, and sometimes impersonal physician approaches to chronic disorders, a growing number of patients actively pursue complementary or alternative medical care, including manual modes of therapy and mind-body practices.4,5 If properly prescribed and delivered by professionals, such approaches—which are rapidly becoming an expected standard of care for patients with chronic pain6,7—may confer some clinically significant benefits. Multidisciplinary pain clinics recognize that many hands-on approaches to patient care, including osteopathic manipulative treatment (OMT), chiropractic adjustments, and massage, can provide distinct solutions for individuals with chronic pain—solutions that would be unavailable from practitioners who ignore or dismiss non-touch modalities.8
Osteopathic manipulative medicine (OMM) is the component of the osteopathic medical profession that approaches total patient care by emphasizing application of distinctive osteopathic principles and practice (OPP). Osteopathic manipulative medicine provides a patient-centered approach that integrates recognized and rational healing methods, including OMT, to improve the health and physiologic function of patients. It is the part of the osteopathic philosophy in which we discuss the physical spectrum that considers an individual's "dis-ease to disease" and the body unity link of mental/emotional dis-ease that coexists with physical disease. Although OMM is recognized by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the United States as a mainstream medical discipline, OMT in isolation is classified by the NIH's National Center of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) as one of several promising "complementary" procedures among a variety of other heterogeneous manipulative and body-based practices.9-12 Regardless of NIH classification, the use of OMT in OMM specialty clinics is commonplace and has been perceived by many patients as highly effective in decreasing their pain and in increasing their mobility.13
An OMM approach that integrates palpatory diagnosis and OMT provides the balance that patients with persistent nonmalignant pain seek between state-of-the-art interventions and individualized patient-centered care. Osteopathic manipulative medicine incorporates strategies to both decrease pain and to enhance physiologic function in patients. For such patients, treatment with OMM offers two major recognized advantages: an expanded differential of potentially treatable etiologies and an individualized, patient-centered pain prescription based on the application of osteopathic principles.
Many osteopathic physicians emphasize patient education and offer a pragmatic philosophy similar to that adopted by multidisciplinary pain management clinics. In addition, OMT offers patients an additional therapeutic option with a low risk-to-benefit ratio and a growing evidence base of efficacy.14,15
| General Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine Considerations in Patients With Chronic Pain |
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In many cases, chronic pain pathways involving allodynia (generalized lowered thresholds to pain) develop when changing gene expression allows silent receptors to become active in the spinal cord, or when facilitatory modulation results in "spinal cord learning."17,18 In such cases, the patient may simply present with persistent pain.
The rational application of OMT for patients with persistent pain cannot have a singular focus, nor can it be considered a static phenomenon (ie, effects on gene expression as well as the changing face of pain and pain perceptions as chronicity alters the body unit).19,20 In formulating multimodal treatment plans, approaches based on OMM embrace principles of body unity and integrate palpation and OMT techniques into each patient's prescription. Physician choices concerning OMT techniques and goals depend on each patient's unique pain presentation, suspected pathways involved in that presentation, and those body regions diagnosed as containing somatic dysfunction.
A complete review of diagnostic regimens and therapeutic options for patients with persistent pain is beyond the scope of the present article. Instead, this article provides a concise overview of the OMM paradigm and introduces a general algorithm for pain management (Figure 1). Discussion of persistent pain management is limited to generalities related to the integration of OPP in the application of OMT. Where pertinent, specific common chronic pain presentations are described as examples supporting the algorithm.
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| Pain Management Algorithm: Applying Osteopathic Principles and Practice |
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Treatment protocols formulated from this algorithm incorporate the interdependence of all tenets of osteopathic medicine,21 resulting in an individually designed prescription to address each patient who has persistent pain. In applying this algorithm to patient care, osteopathic physicians may also choose to use some or all of the mainstream and/or complementary treatment modalities used by other healthcare professionals.
| Structure-Function Considerations: Somatic Causes of Persistent Pain |
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An osteopathic palpatory examination often provides clues to the underlying mechanism(s) of a patient's injury.2 Such palpatory insights can lead to further questions, examinations, and tests, each designed to identify structural factors associated with specific pain generators or factors that interfere with certain self-healing mechanisms. The resulting findings, in turn, can lead the physician to explore functional demand issues associated with potential mechanisms of repeated injury or cumulative microtrauma caused by habitual, occupational, or postural ergonomic stresses.
One way to determine whether a given structure or somatic dysfunction is a primary cause of significant discomfort in a patient is to determine if it is a "pain generator" tissue. Comparing the anatomic location, quality, and unique referral distribution of a patient's pain symptoms with known myotomal, neurologic, and sclerotomal pain maps increases the likelihood of locating pain generators. In many cases, such diagnoses can be confirmed by an effective therapeutic response—albeit even temporary—to local anesthetic injection or manual correction of dysfunction.
Sclerotomal tissues (ie, skeletal, arthrodial, and ligamentous generators) typically mediate pain described by patients as "deep, dull, and toothache-like." Sclerotomal pain patterns are frequently overlooked because they may project some distance from their pain generators. In addition, these pain patterns are infrequently taught to physicians. The "Glossary of Osteopathic Terminology" contains sclerotomal maps relating spinal segmental levels to sclerotomal appendicular pain.23
Figure 2 illustrates segmentally related sclerotomal examples of ligamentous pain patterns commonly seen in patients with low back pain (LBP). Patients with ligamentous pain generators often cannot find a comfortable position and are continuously shifting position—a presentation sometimes referred to as "theater-cocktail party syndrome."24
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Both antigravity and postural antagonist muscles are likely to contain taut bands that demonstrate a local twitch response within the affected muscle during perpendicularly applied snapping palpatory examination. This phenomenon has been linked to the presence of segmentally related spinal reflexes (ie, segmental facilitation).16,28
Peripheral myotomal pain generators can originate in a single muscle. Alternatively, multiple peripheral inputs may establish more complex patterns of muscle dysfunction. Peripheral input can also produce a central imprint that persists as a primary source of pain-modifying peripheral referral patterns (ie, somatosomatic reflex). Common myotomal patterns also include muscles sharing the same radicular innervation (as occurs in patients with discogenic disease) and muscles contributing to the same general function (as in the myotatic unit pattern occurring in patients with overuse syndromes).
In structure-function considerations, osteopathic physicians using osteopathic diagnostic palpation seek to identify "any impaired or altered skeletal, arthrodial, and/or myofascial function" (viz "somatic dysfunction")23 that adds to the nociceptive load, and to recognize any related lymphatic, neural, and/or vascular elements that might complicate underlying pathophysiologic conditions. The palpatory characteristics sought by osteopathic physicians include sensitivity to measured palpation (S), tissue texture changes (T), asymmetry (A), and restricted motion (R) (together known as STAR characteristics). Tissue texture changes often provide the most important information concerning the underlying pathophysiologic status of the patient's periphery and homeostatic response status.
After weighing risk-to-benefit ratios associated with the tentative diagnosis of a patient's condition, OMT may be delivered to reduce or remove the identified somatic dysfunction or to modulate central and peripheral mechanisms involved in pain generation. Currently, palpated peripheral tissue texture characteristics have the greatest influence on the osteopathic physician's choice of an activating force for OMT. However, sophistication in making this choice should improve as studies reveal how differing manual forces affect mechanoreceptors and mechanonociceptors in the tensegrity-integrin model, spinal cord gating mechanisms, and synaptic plasticity.29-33
Exemplars: Low Back Pain and Headaches—The two
best-documented exemplars for application of structure-function approaches in
diagnosis and treatment of patients with persistent pain symptoms are LBP and
cervicogenic
headache.34-38
These two high-incidence conditions are multifactorial, yet typically
neuromusculoskeletal in origin, and they each have great propensity for
disability. The evidence base is strongest in these two regions for
interexaminer reliability of STAR objective findings in palpatory
diagnosis,34 as
well as for measurable benefit from manual treatment in reducing pain and
disability.35-38
Furthermore, studies have identified a specific role for OMT in LBP
management.14,39
The beneficial role for manual modes of therapy, including OMT, has been documented for patients with acute, subacute, and chronic LBP.35-38 In patients with LBP, spinal manipulation generally—and OMT specifically—produce physiologic effects similar to efficacious prescription nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and effects more beneficial than either physical therapy or home back exercises.13,38 Beneficial long-term functional outcomes for manual therapy have also been demonstrated in patients with chronic LBP.40 Based on a review of the literature, Mein41 postulated that patient populations with subacute (secondary) and chronic (tertiary) LBP would benefit most from manipulative care, rather than from more costly behavioral modification, functional restoration, and chronic pain management programs.
Using a structure-function approach, Greenman39 examined 183 patients who had persistent LBP for an average of 31 months. With osteopathic palpation, he identified three or more of six common diagnoses of somatic dysfunction in 50% of this cohort (Table). Treatment with OMT to eliminate the identified somatic dysfunctions resulted in nearly 75% of the dysfunctional group returning to work or to their other activities of daily living.39
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The present author has also noted that undiagnosed somatic dysfunctions, particularly "nonphysiologic dysfunctions" (eg, traumatically induced pelvic shears), may result in several years of persistent pain (either locally or at distant sites linked through compensatory mechanisms) or the development of MTrPs.42
Dysfunction of one sacroiliac joint due to nonphysiologic pelvic shear forces greatly increases functional demand on the other sacroiliac joint and its stabilizing ligaments.42 Shears or compression at the pubic symphysis are common dysfunctions that can happen postpartum, after a fall, and after a missed step.42 Yet, these dysfunctions are frequently overlooked because the pain associated with them is located in the frequently used sacroiliac joints. Pubic shears restricting motion at the pubic symphysis causes the two sacroiliac joints to overwork and therefore be painful. Pain in the overworked sacroiliac joints posteriorly distracts the physician from looking for the cause coming from restricted motion of the pubic symphysis in front.
Removal of myofascial somatic dysfunction, including MTrPs, has been shown to be extremely effective in reducing or eliminating persistent LBP.25,26 Patients with the muscle trigger points displayed on common composite MTrP charts (Figure 3) responded well to a wide range of treatment modalities, including such OMT techniques as counterstrain, myofascial release variants, and post–isometric relaxation muscle energy.25,26 In addition, manual correction of articular or myofascial somatic dysfunction has proved to be an effective adjunct therapy, regardless of whether pain radiates into the lower extremities.26,43
With recurrence of the same pattern of pain and somatic dysfunction in a patient after otherwise effective OMT, the osteopathic physician should consider dysfunctional homeostatic mechanisms and a range of perpetuating factors (eg, postural decompensation), as well as site-specific primary viscerosomatic reflexes (Figure 1).
Similarly, headache and neck pain have been extensively studied with respect to various somatic dysfunctions and manual approaches.38,44,45 For example, placebo-controlled diagnostic investigations have documented the association of cervical pain with dysfunction of zygapophyseal joints in patients who have whiplash injury.46
Functional Demand and Somatic Perpetuating
Factors—Functional demand plays a precipitating and/or perpetuating
role in various persistent pain disorders and recurrent somatic dysfunctions.
Increased functional demand on somatic structures underlies repetitive
strain/sprain injuries, ranging from carpal tunnel syndrome in keyboard
operators and poultry-processing knife
handlers47 to L5-S1
isthmic spondylolisthesis in individuals who must stand for extended
periods.24,28
Prolonged functional strain/sprain is known to activate fibroblast mechanochemical transduction, modulate gene expression patterns, and introduce inflammatory and tissue remodeling processes.31,48,49 In this fashion, persistent strain and/or pain patterns lead to peripheral structural pathologic change. Postural strain/sprain is among the most frequent of functional demand conditions that create persistent pain from musculoskeletal sources.
Inattention to ergonomics at work or play increases functional demand, which can, in turn, perpetuate chronic or recurrent pain. Thus, osteopathic physicians should review occupational and personal biomechanical stressors as part of patient history. By providing education to patients suffering from such discomfort, osteopathic physicians can better address persistent pain resulting from various prolonged activities, including holding a phone between ear and shoulder, using a keyboard with improper seating relative to desk height, and falling asleep slumped forward in a recliner.
Otherwise effective pain management strategies aimed at peripheral pain generators often initially fail outright, or the pain generators will recur after these strategies if the presence of excessive functional demand, postural imbalance, or other perpetuating factors are not considered.27,50 Unfortunately, prior failure of pain management strategies may prompt osteopathic physicians to eliminate such strategies from their rightful place among approaches to be considered in the early stages of treatment programs. Prior failure of pain management strategies may also cause physicians or patients to dismiss the strategies later in treatment programs, after complicating postural stress or adjacent dysfunctions have been addressed.
Timing, tissue response, and multifactorial conditions within the body unit affect OMM treatment strategies that are prompted by applying the structure-function principle. These conditions can both affect and be affected by other portions of the proposed algorithm (Figure 1). Physical examination of patients with persistent pain must go beyond identification of peripheral pain generators and screening for other perpetuating causes of pain. A properly constructed OMM approach rarely focuses on only one principle.
Body Unity Considerations: Tangible Impact of Persistent Pain
Although acute pain provides essential information for survival, persistent
pain often results in anxiety, depression, and a reduction in the quality of
life. Such body unity (or mind-body-spirit) effects of persistent pain can
best be evaluated by carefully performing a traditional patient history and
physical examination, supplemented by palpation. The resulting findings can
provide diagnostic clues, as well as targets of opportunity, to reduce
precipitating, perpetuating, and magnifying factors associated with persistent
pain.
Discovery of a body unity dysfunction in a patient with chronic pain often shifts the treatment focus from simply identifying and removing the underlying organic disease (ie, pain generator) to adding strategies designed to empower the patient to modify environmental factors and cognitive processes associated with the disability. Well-established behavioral interventions, including patient education, are commonly used in body unity approaches to managing chronic disabling pain.
Mind-Body Unity and Persistent Pain—Chronic persistent
pain is not simply acute pain that has lasted a long time. Positron emission
tomography scans of the brains of patients with chronic neuropathic pain
reveal a shift of acute pain activity from the sensory cortex to regions
associated with affective-motivational processing, such as the anterior
cingulate gyrus.51
For this reason, patients with chronic pain often attempt to describe their
"suffering" and its impact on their lives, rather than simply
providing a location and quality description of their pain.
An osteopathic palpatory examination will also aid physicians in eliciting a thorough chronic pain history of a patient by helping to gain the patient's trust.2 An integrated patient history is essential in determining the impact of pain on physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual functions unique to each individual. Physician training for understanding patients' physical limitations (the most obvious manifestations of persistent pain) is part of standard medical education. However, nonphysical limitations in the mental and emotional realms are less often articulated by patients and, therefore, greater effort is required by physicians to recognize these limitations.
Consideration by osteopathic physicians of mind-body connections in patients with persistent pain closely parallels biopsychosocial models embraced by multidisciplinary pain clinics.52 In such models, chronic pain is a frequent, well-established cause of depression, impacting both the central and autonomic nervous systems.53 Furthermore, these models empirically recognize that physical pain and connective tissue plasticity mechanisms may be temporally linked to anger, fear, or loss.53-55 An example of this connection is pain that was traumatically introduced in an individual during a traffic accident when there was enough time to hopelessly anticipate the oncoming car's approach. Both fascial dysfunction and emotions associated with the physical injury serve to anchor pain in such individuals, who may require additional counseling to deal with subsequently expressed nonphysical factors.
Conversely, hands-on management of somatic dysfunction offers osteopathic physicians a unique and often valuable access to patients' mind-body connections. Effects of OMT are occasionally dramatic, as in the catharsis effect of certain somatoemotional releases56 or the beneficial effects of the Fulford percussion hammer technique in patients with chronic posttraumatic dysfunctions.57 Treatment of patients with somatic dysfunction often offers opportunities for osteopathic physicians to discuss strategies with patients for reducing mental, spiritual, and emotional pain.
Persistent Pain, Somatic Dysfunction, and Homeostatic Responses
Various homeostatic coping and regulating mechanisms influence the
physiologic processes responsible for maintaining
pain.58-60
Homeostasis may be altered through focused biochemical, bioelectrical,
neuroendocrine, and/or psychosympathetic mechanisms that affect specific
structures or target receptors. Furthermore, an integrated series of
homeostatic mechanisms may provide for panstructural biomechanical changes,
such as shifting weight-bearing responsibilities away from painful sites. This
process creates easily recognizable patterns associated with certain pain
syndromes.
Osteopathic manipulative treatment has long been noted to produce independent beneficial effects on certain autonomic, circulatory, neuroendocrine, postural, and respiratory mechanisms.61 Therefore, it is rational to consider that influencing these mechanisms may also have a beneficial impact on pain modulation, as depicted in Figure 4.
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Autonomic System Homeostasis: Pain and Osteopathic Manipulative
Medicine—The importance of sympathetic nervous system involvement in
certain forms of neuropathic pain led to a taxonomic classification
distinguishing sympathetically maintained pain (SMP) from sympathetically
independent pain
(SIP).62,63
Sympathetically maintained pain, defined as "pain attributable to
sympathetic efferent function in peripheral
tissues,"63
is abolished when sympathetic supply to a painful region is modulated by
manipulative techniques. In contrast, SIP is not dependent on sympathetic
efferent function and, thus, it is less likely to be affected by manipulative
techniques affecting the sympathetic nervous system. The classification of SMP and SIP dissociates the presence of pain from gross signs of sympathetic dysregulation (eg, altered temperature, excessive sweating, trophic changes), so that obvious evidence of abnormal sympathetic activity need not accompany SMP. Thus, although SMP syndromes (including complex regional pain syndromes) are often relieved by sympathetic ganglion blocks,64 persistent pain with lesser SMP may be addressed by using OMT to manage somatic dysfunction and modulate hypersympathetic activity.65
Modulation of hypersympathotonia has been linked to pain reduction,66 enhanced healing rates,67 and improvement in a variety of visceral and somatic functions.68 This modulation is a hallmark effect of the OMM approach and warrants consideration in conditions characterized by chronic pain.
Respiratory-Circulatory Homeostasis Role in
Pain—Controlled breathing (ie, focused respiration) and relief of
pain have long been linked. The ancient Chinese prescribed controlled
breathing for reducing arthritic
pain,69 while lay
and professional people in modern times have used it to reduce the pain of
labor and
delivery.70 Beyond
the mind-body effect of focused respiration as used in meditation and in
lowering blood pressure, heart rate, and pain perception, the
respiratory-circulatory model popularized by Zink and
Lawson71 is
characterized by reduction of edema and associated peripheral biochemical
molecules linked to nociception.
Treatment goals associated with the Zink-Lawson respiratory-circulatory model71 are traditionally administered in the following sequence:
1. Opening fascial pathways. Somatic dysfunction
associated with fascial restriction to fluid flow is corrected with OMT at
four regional transition zones of the body.
2. Maximizing primary-secondary respiration.
Effective, deep synchronized respiration is sought using a variety of
osteopathic manipulative techniques, including doming of the
thoracoabdominopelvic diaphragms.
3. Augmenting lymphaticovenous drainage. Homeostatic
OMT is applied (often using one or more rhythmic lymphaticovenous pumps) to
effect pressure changes between the thorax and adjacent regions. Recent
literature suggests that such rhythmic motion may also have a beneficial
effect on increasing release of endothelial nitric oxide synthetase, a
homeostatic
molecule.44,72
4. Enhancing cellular level health. Local tissue
techniques (eg, effleurage) are used to mobilize local edema.
Deep breathing creates obvious motion in at least 136 joints and is palpable in all body tissues.73 It is a continuous movement with active and passive components. Through tensegrity relationships, the patient or osteopathic physician can focus deep breathing to remove motion restrictions or engage neuromuscular reflexes to achieve tightening or relaxation of selected tissues.73
Postural Homeostasis in Pain and Dysfunction—Chronic or
recurrent pain syndromes have been linked to conditions predisposing patients
to postural stress (eg, altered lordotic-kyphotic curves, lower extremity
asymmetry, postural muscle imbalance, scoliotic changes, unlevel cranial base,
unlevel sacral base). Travell and
Simons26 note that
postural decompensation is the most common precipitating and perpetuating
cause of MTrPs. These MTrPs are implicated in many chronic pain syndromes,
ranging from LBP and headaches to carpal tunnel syndrome, temporomandibular
joint dysfunction, and pain perceived as
angina.27
Pain associated with postural stress and strain can be sclerotomal (ie, postural ligaments) or myotomal (ie, postural muscles). It can also have a significant role in radiculopathies associated with osteoarthritic and discogenic conditions.50 Irvin74 demonstrated that chronic pain throughout the body could be attributed to an unlevel sacral base, and reestablishing postural homeostasis removed most of the symptoms.
The OMM approach to postural care is described thoroughly in Foundations for Osteopathic Medicine and consists of patient education, OMT, exercise, and sometimes an appropriate orthotic regimen.28 In addition, the Zink-Lawson respiratory-circulatory approach71 is applicable in preparing tissues for postural homeostasis because of a biologic tendency to compensate for postural imbalance at regional transition zones.
The following anecdotal case vignette typifies presentation of a patient who seeks treatment for chronic back pain.
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Pain onset had first occurred while the patient carried a small bale of hay in front of his body. He had stepped in an unseen pothole, stumbled, and fell. The next day, he noticed full symptoms, which persisted as recurring episodes for several months. Between and during episodes, he achieved only partial relief with ibuprofen (800 mg/d). Physical therapy reportedly aggravated his pain.
During the next 3 years, the patient visited several physicians, visits that were prompted by three to four substantial recurrences of pain radiation per year. Negative results from electromyographic, magnetic resonance imaging, and radiographic studies—coupled with negative results from tests of reflex changes and nonspecific, nonradicular patterns of muscle weakness—during these 3 years left the patient with no specific diagnosis beyond "low back pain with recurrent lumbosacral sprain."
Chuck was unable to work on the farm and said that he had the impression that physicians believed he was "malingering," or "lazy." He was depressed because he thought his family also shared these beliefs, and he became concerned about his marriage.
Clinical findings revealed a slim white man who denied smoking or illicit drug use. Review of his nonmusculoskeletal systems was noncontributory. Results of deep tendon reflexes, pathologic reflexes, straight legraising testing, Chapman's viscerosomatic reflex screen, and Lloyd's kidney punch were all negative. The result for a Trendelenburg test (a test to determine any weakness of hip abductors) of the right leg was questionable. Somatic dysfunction included reduced lumbar lordosis, left iliacus tender point, right sacral shear, and tenderness over the right iliolumbar ligament and posterior sacroiliac ligament, as well as tenderness and hypertonicity in the right piriformis muscle. Flexion tests and measurements of iliac crest height suggested a possible "short leg syndrome." The common compensatory pattern noted by Zink and Lawson71 was violated by the lumbopelvic junction, and the pelvic floor was tight. The patient was informed that this constellation of somatic dysfunction could cause chronic low back pain that often responded favorably to OMT.39
Osteopathic manipulative treatment given to the patient consisted of applying the springing technique to the right sacral shear, counterstrain to the iliacus and piriformis tender points, and indirect balanced ligamentous tension to the thoracolumbar and sacral regions. Fascial patterns were treated with high velocity low amplitude (HVLA) techniques aimed toward symmetry, and abdominal and pelvic diaphragms were treated with indirect and direct myofascial release, respectively. Post-OMT iliac crest heights and flexion measurements were normal. The patient left with instructions to drink lots of fluid, switch to acetaminophen as needed, avoid jumping or lifting until his next visit, and return in 1 week for follow-up examination.
At 1-week follow-up, the patient noted that both his acute and nagging pains had been relieved for nearly 4 days, but mild nagging pain had since recurred. A recurrence of sacral shear (approximately 40% of original) and piriformis muscle dysfunction were also noted and re-treated with OMT. Two weeks later, the patient returned with no symptoms and no recurrence of pain. He was instructed to make an appointment for 1 month later, but to cancel the appointment if he remained symptom-free. He phoned 1 month later, reporting that he was without pain and able to function normally at home.
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In addition to providing appropriate strategies for management of pain, the OMM pain management algorithm incorporates osteopathic principles to identify and address a variety of host factors directed toward both the underlying cause and tangible impact of persistent discomfort in patients. These principles provide a framework for patient education to foster compliance built on an understanding of complex interrelationships among many different factors.
Each osteopathic prescription seeks to discover and incorporate those factors needed to address a patient's unique response to pain. The emphasis in treating patients who have persistent nonmalignant pain should be on improving function, decreasing peripheral nociception and central facilitation, and empowering individuals to move forward in resuming their normal activities of daily living.
When osteopathic principles and practice are actively applied to create a treatment plan for a patient with chronic pain, the result is a personalized, effective care plan typically combining nonpharmacologic treatment strategies with appropriate types and levels of pharmacotherapy. The inclusion of patient education in a comprehensive treatment plan helps to improve quality of life and to break the vicious cycle resulting from pathophysiologic mechanisms of persistent pain.
| Footnotes |
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| References |
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