Added: 3 years ago
From: DRERICMCGRAW
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  • How is multilevel adjusting a baby with colic harmful? Proof please. SMT has been shown to have some value for colic, but studies remain inconclusive. Nothing else works with the exception of L. Reuteri, which was found to relieve symptoms w/1 week of treatment.

  • Life and Sherman. Evidence Based Best Practices is the norm at chiropractic schools today.

  • Chiropractic was built not just on vitalism. It was vitalism applied to anatomy, physiology and physics as it was known at that time. Osteopathy and mainstream medicine had equally wacky treatments and unproven theories. Modern day schools have geared away from vitalism. There is no chiropractic association that spouses vitalism, even the most dogmatic one; the ICA does not spouse vitalism. It is historic only. Schools discourage subluxation theory usage with the exception of Life and She

  • I have a frozen shoulder that came on overnight. I didn't do anything with it at first because I thought I slept wrong and it will go away. After 2 months, I started PT. after almost 3 weeks of PT and no real improvement, i went to a Dr for ART. After just 2 sessions, i already see an improvement. 2 sessions = about 30 minutes total. It is EXTREMELY Painful, my first visit, i screamed so loud, people next door would have heard me. Regardless, 2nd visit was better. I will go till it's gone.

  • I had a bad frozen shoulder and was treated exclusively with ART, I had noticeable improvement in ROM after even the first session. It got better each time until it was normal again. I see many similar techniques used in this video that were used to treat me.

  • Might have been better if you had filmed when the patient had limited ROM, not now when he clearly has almost normal ROM.

    It can be very tricky working with an early adhesive capsulitis patient and that would be more useful to see IMO.

  • If the patient actually did have a frozen shoulder rather then the one in this clip which clearly isn't wouldn't the movement have to be passive?

    Even passive movement hurts on a frozen shoulder so not sure that ART would be my first therapy of choice. In the later stages like this one demonstrated sure but I'd like to see how you would go about it in the initial stages when the shoulder actually is frozen.

  • @AAAngus1 This patient did present with frozen shoulder. I treated him with ART the whole time. However, you must realize this was not a day one or week one video for that matter. It was slow going at first with no movement.

  • @AAAngus1 Im with YOu AAAAngus This is NOT a Frozen Shoulder!!! Ive worked with many BAD frozen shoulders and they cannot even get into these positions to start with

  • awesome. I'm a massage therapist/bodyworker and I use techniques very similar to ART. Usually I do a lot of muscle stripping to re-align the fibers and I use HMT (HansOn Muscle Therapy).

  • Comment removed

  • it's good to see a chiropractor using techniques that have actually been proven to be clinically effective for once. well done

  • @lald6103 I concur with all of this except the "for once" part. I'm a DC who opposes the lack of this in our profession, but to say "for once" is mistaken as well. There are plenty of chiros who practice evidenced based/proven stuff.

  • @deyessorc chiro is a profession built on mythical concepts,e.g "all disease is the result of subluxations in the spine".there are MANY chiros out there who use and actively promote techniques which have no proven efficacy and could in some rare cases be harmful,e.g.multi-level spinal manipulation for infantile colic, which one study showed is used by >60% of >1000 chiros surveyed. while i commend your practice, unfortunately unproven techniques in mainstream chiro practice outweigh proven ones.

  • nice video doc!

  • Comment removed

  • Sorry to go on, but another question. As I've had in both shoulders and I'm nearly free, can you get this condition again.  I was hoping once I'd had in one shoulder that might be it, or is this something that could repeat itself again?

  • Yes you can be prone to frozen shoulder. Usually, a physical overuse and some mental stress will bring this condition back. As far as treament, of course I recommend Active Release.

  • I've had in both shoulders.There's no way I could have taken physio in the first to mid stages, and for a good deal of the middle part where you are not in pain but totally rigid, the rotator not moving at all. This man has quite a deal of movement, great to see. I'm in the last stages of my second shoulder injury . Not causing me any more grief.

  • I'm P. T and I've used theses techniques today with one of my patients and it works instantly.

  • I've had clients who could not do nearly that amount of range of motion. Treating frozen shoulder with trigger point therapy alone worked very well for them.  It takes time and they have to do the homework I give them, but it works well without surgery in my experience

  • Now this seems like a more practical form of chiropractic. Mixing it with a physical therapy only seems natural!

  • What is a frozen shoulder exactly?

  • it`s inflammation of soft tissue around the shoulder joint. the causes is unknown but some said because prolonged immobilization but i don`t think it`s the main reason

  • nice video,

  • very cool

  • oohhh the teres minor is killin me doc..

  • good video! ive had some active release done a few of which you did in this video. combined with cross friction its a pretty powerful combo for working out shoulder issues.

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