2007
DOI: 10.1038/sj.jhh.1002133
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Atlas vertebra realignment and achievement of arterial pressure goal in hypertensive patients: a pilot study

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Cited by 59 publications
(65 citation statements)
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“…The American Heart Association reported in 2003 that over 65 million Americans suffer from hypertension. 1 With the increasing demand for evidence-based chiropractic care and the effect of chiropractic manipulation on patients with hypertension reported by Bakris et al, 2 it is imperative that all chiropractic students be well-versed in the correct method for assessing blood pressures. This is in harmony with the Council on Chiropractic Education accreditation standards meta-competency 1 to perform properly an initial assessment and diagnosis of the patient.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The American Heart Association reported in 2003 that over 65 million Americans suffer from hypertension. 1 With the increasing demand for evidence-based chiropractic care and the effect of chiropractic manipulation on patients with hypertension reported by Bakris et al, 2 it is imperative that all chiropractic students be well-versed in the correct method for assessing blood pressures. This is in harmony with the Council on Chiropractic Education accreditation standards meta-competency 1 to perform properly an initial assessment and diagnosis of the patient.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The primary efficacy end point of the study was represented by the effects of the approach on sphygmomanometric systolic and diastolic blood pressure values, which were reduced at the end of the 8-week follow-up period by about 14 and 8 mm Hg, respectively (placebo-corrected values). 12 The intriguing findings provided by Bakris et al in this pilot study arise a number of questions that hopefully will be matter of future investigations. First, how are satisfactorily documented in the present study are the blood pressure lowering effects of the chiropractic procedure?…”
mentioning
confidence: 77%
“…3,[8][9][10] The favourable haemodynamic outcome of the surgical intervention is likely to be triggered by a sympathetic deactivation, as several indirect and/or direct markers of adrenergic neural drive, such as plasma and urinary noradrenaline, low-frequency/high-frequency spectral power ratio as well as efferent postganglionic sympathetic nerve firing rate, have all shown a consistent and rather homogeneous reduction of adrenergic cardiovascular drive following surgical decompression. [10][11] In the present issue of the Journal of Human Hypertension, Bakris et al 12 add a new piece of information to the above-mentioned findings, by providing evidence on the favourable blood pressure lowering effects of chiropractic procedures capable to correct misalignment of the Atlas vertebra and thus to induce medullary vascular decompression. According to a double-blind, placebo-controlled study design, hypertensive patients with documented evidence of vertebral misalignment were randomized either to a chiropractic vertebral realignment procedure or to a sham intervention.…”
mentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The relationship of an atlas chiropractic subluxation and amelioration of cardiac symptoms may be similar to the amelioration of hypertension by an atlas-specific adjustment as described by Bakris et al 24 or in the treatment of infantile colic as reported by Wiberg et al 25 The authors of this article theorize that the amelioration of the arrhythmia and hypertension may be linked to the moderating parasympathetic tone conveyed by the vagus directly on the heart through the cardiac plexus or on the ansa subclavia through the vagal anastomoses previously described in the article. The tachyarrhythmia in the 22-year-old female patient described by Kaymak et al 2 disappeared after she underwent surgery.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%