脊柱操作的神经生理学效应

Joel G. Pickar
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引用次数: 4

摘要

背景:尽管临床证据表明脊柱推拿的益处及其明显的广泛应用,但脊柱推拿作用的生物学机制尚不清楚。虽然这并不否定脊柱推拿的临床效果,但它阻碍了更广泛的科学和卫生保健社区的接受,并阻碍了改善脊柱推拿的合理策略。目的本综述旨在探讨脊柱推拿作用的神经生理学基础。研究设计一篇综述性文章,主要讨论基础科学文献和临床导向的基础科学研究。方法:这篇综述文章主要来自Medline上的同行评议文献。一些教科书出版物和报告被引用。提出了一个理论模型来描述脊柱操作、节段生物力学、神经系统和末端器官生理学之间的关系。给出了这些关系的实验数据。结果脊柱操纵引起的生物力学变化通过影响感觉信息流入中枢神经系统而被认为具有生理后果。肌纺锤体传入神经和高尔基肌腱传入神经受到脊柱操纵的刺激。较小直径的感觉神经纤维可能被激活,尽管这还没有被直接证明。椎间盘突出引起的椎间孔的机械和化学变化可影响背根和背根神经节,但脊柱操作是否直接影响这些变化尚不清楚。个体腰椎间盘突出已显示临床改善响应脊柱操作。众所周知,中枢易化现象会增加中枢神经元的接受野,使阈下或无害的刺激进入中枢疼痛通路。大量研究表明,脊柱操作增加疼痛耐受性或其阈值。因此,脊椎操作的作用机制之一可能是通过去除棘旁组织的阈下机械或化学刺激来改变中枢感觉处理的能力。脊柱操作也被认为影响反射神经输出到肌肉和内脏器官。大量证据表明,脊柱操纵引起棘旁肌反射并改变运动神经元的兴奋性。脊柱操纵对这些体身反射的影响可能相当复杂,产生兴奋和抑制作用。尽管大量信息也表明,来自棘旁组织的感觉输入,特别是有害输入,可以反射性地引起交感神经活动,但关于脊柱操作对这些反射和终末器官功能的影响的知识更为有限。结论存在一个理论框架,在此基础上可以提出关于脊柱操纵神经生理效应的假设。实验证据表明,脊柱操作影响来自棘旁组织的初级传入神经元,运动控制系统和疼痛处理。这一领域的实验工作是必要的,应该鼓励以帮助更好地理解脊柱操作治疗范围的潜在机制。
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Efectos neuroFisiológicos de la manipulación vertebral

Background context

Despite clinical evidence for the benefits of spinal maniputation and the apparent wide usage of it, the biological mechanisms underlying the effects of spinal manipulation are not known. Although this does not negate the clinical effects of spinal manipulation, it hinders acceptance by the wider scientific and health-care communities and hinders rational strategies for improving the delivery of spinal manipulation.

Purpose

The purpose of this review article is to examine the neurophysiological basis for the effects of spinal manipulation.

Study design

A review article discussing primarily basic science literature and clinically oriented basic science studies.

Methods

This review article draws primarily from the peer-reviewed literature available on Medline. Several textbook publications and reports are referenced. A theoretical model is presented describing the relationships between spinal manipulation, segmental biomechanics, the nervous system and end-organ physiology. Experimental data for these relationships are presented.

Results

Biomechanical changes caused by spinal manipulation are thought to have physiological consequences by means of their effects on the inflow of sensory information to the central nervous system. Muscle spindle afferents and Golgi tendon organ afferents are stimulated by spinal manipulation. Smaller-diameter sensory nerve fibers are likely activated, although this has not been demonstrated directly. Mechanical and chemical changes in the intervertebral foramen caused by a herniated intervertebral disc can affect the dorsal roots and dorsal root ganglia, but it is not known if spinal manipulation directly affects these changes. Individuals with herniated lumbar discs have shown clinical improvement in response to spinal manipulation. The phenomenon of central facilitation is known to increase the receptive field of central neurons, enabling either subthreshold or innocuous stimuli access to central pain pathways. Numerous studies show that spinal manipulation increases pain tolerance or its threshold. One mechanism underlying the effects of spinal manipulation may, therefore, be the manipulation's ability to alter central sensory processing by removing subthreshold mechanical or chemical stimuli from paraspinal tissues. Spinal manipulation is also thought to affect reflex neural outputs to both muscle and visceral organs. Substantial evidence demonstrates that spinal manipulation evokes paraspinal muscle reflexes and alters motoneuron excitability. The effects of spinal manipulation on these somatosomatic reflexes may be quite complex, producing excitatory and inhibitory effects. Whereas substantial information also shows that sensory input, especially noxious input, from paraspinal tissues can reflexively elicit sympathetic nerve activity, knowledge about spinal manipulation's effects on these reflexes and on end-organ function is more limited.

Conclusions

A theoretical framework exists from which hypotheses about the neurophysiological effects of spinal manipulation can be developed. An experimental body of evidence exists indicating that spinal manipulation impacts primary afferent neurons from paraspinal tissues, the motor control system and pain processing. Experimental work in this area is warranted and should be encouraged to help better understand mechanisms underlying the therapeutic scope of spinal manipulation.

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