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Effect of lumbar spinal manipulation on local and remote pressure pain threshold and pinprick sensitivity in asymptomatic individuals: a randomised trial
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Effect of lumbar spinal manipulation on local and remote pressure pain threshold and pinprick sensitivity in asymptomatic individuals: a randomised trial

S.L. Dorron, B.E. Losco, P.D. Drummond and B.F. Walker
Chiropractic & Manual Therapies, Vol.24(1), Article 47
2016
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CC BY-NC V4.0 Open Access

Abstract

Background: The mechanisms of clinical pain relief associated with spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) are poorly understood. Our objective was to determine whether lumbar high-velocity low-amplitude SMT altered pressure pain threshold (PPT) and pinprick sensitivity (PPS) locally and remotely, how long any change lasted (up to 30min), and whether changes related to the side of SMT. Methods: Thirty-four asymptomatic participants (mean age 22.6years ±4.0) received a right- or left-sided lumbar SMT. PPT and PPS were measured bilaterally at the calf, lumbar spine, scapula, and forehead before and immediately, 10, 20, and 30min after intervention. Data were collected between October 2014 and June 2015. Results: Bilateral calf and lumbar spine PPT increased significantly after 10 - 20min and was maintained at 30min (7.2-11.8% increase). PPS decreased significantly in all locations at various times (9.8 - 22.5% decrease). At the calf and lumbar spine, PPT increased slightly more ipsilateral to the SMT than contralateral. Conclusions: Lumbar SMT reduced deep pressure sensitivity locally and in the lower limbs for at least 30min, whereas sensitivity to pinprick was reduced systemically. These findings suggest that SMT specifically inhibits deep pressure sensitivity distally. These findings are novel compared to other lumbar SMT studies, and may reflect a local spinal or complex supraspinal analgesic mechanism. Trial registration: Registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12614000682640).

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