The efficacy of a single maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique in the treatment of sacroiliac syndrome

Thesis (M.Tech.: Chiropractic)- Dept of Chiropractic, Durban Institute of Technology, 2005. xiii, 129 leaves :|bill. (some col.) ;|c30 cm === Research indicates the sacroiliac joint (prevalence of sacroiliac syndrome ranges from 19.3% and 47.9% (Toussaint et al., 1999)) as being the primary source...

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Main Author: Botha, Quentin Martin
Language:en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10321/337
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-dut-oai-localhost-10321-3372016-04-21T04:10:54Z The efficacy of a single maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique in the treatment of sacroiliac syndrome Botha, Quentin Martin Chiropractic Sacroiliac joint Backache Manipulation (Therapeutics) Thesis (M.Tech.: Chiropractic)- Dept of Chiropractic, Durban Institute of Technology, 2005. xiii, 129 leaves :|bill. (some col.) ;|c30 cm Research indicates the sacroiliac joint (prevalence of sacroiliac syndrome ranges from 19.3% and 47.9% (Toussaint et al., 1999)) as being the primary source of low-back pain in 22.5% of patients with back pain (Bernard et al., 1987:2107-2130). Treatment options that are available for the treatment of low-back pain include allopathic (Hellman and Stone, 2000), and manual therapies such as hydrotherapy and traction (Cull and Will, 1995). It has been found that allopathic interventions have been less effective than spinal manipulative therapy, even with spinal manipulative therapy having various modes of application (e.g. side posture and drop piece manipulations) (Gatterman et al., 2001). Drop table thrusting techniques were found to be effective for patients with neuromuskuloskeletal problems such as facet syndrome (Haldeman et al., 1993), however, it is still not known which specific drop piece technique is the most appropriate for sacroiliac syndrome. Thus it is important to ascertain the clinical effectiveness of the technique as certain conditions prevent the patient from being positioned in the conventional side posture for treatment of sacroiliac syndrome (White, 2003; Pooke, 2003; Hyde, 2003; Pretorius, 2003; Haldeman, 2003; Cramer, 2003; Engelbrecht, 2003). Therefore this study aims at determining the efficacy of a maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique. 2008-09-04T06:56:30Z 2008-09-04T06:56:30Z 2005 Thesis DIT112706 http://hdl.handle.net/10321/337 en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Chiropractic
Sacroiliac joint
Backache
Manipulation (Therapeutics)
spellingShingle Chiropractic
Sacroiliac joint
Backache
Manipulation (Therapeutics)
Botha, Quentin Martin
The efficacy of a single maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique in the treatment of sacroiliac syndrome
description Thesis (M.Tech.: Chiropractic)- Dept of Chiropractic, Durban Institute of Technology, 2005. xiii, 129 leaves :|bill. (some col.) ;|c30 cm === Research indicates the sacroiliac joint (prevalence of sacroiliac syndrome ranges from 19.3% and 47.9% (Toussaint et al., 1999)) as being the primary source of low-back pain in 22.5% of patients with back pain (Bernard et al., 1987:2107-2130). Treatment options that are available for the treatment of low-back pain include allopathic (Hellman and Stone, 2000), and manual therapies such as hydrotherapy and traction (Cull and Will, 1995). It has been found that allopathic interventions have been less effective than spinal manipulative therapy, even with spinal manipulative therapy having various modes of application (e.g. side posture and drop piece manipulations) (Gatterman et al., 2001). Drop table thrusting techniques were found to be effective for patients with neuromuskuloskeletal problems such as facet syndrome (Haldeman et al., 1993), however, it is still not known which specific drop piece technique is the most appropriate for sacroiliac syndrome. Thus it is important to ascertain the clinical effectiveness of the technique as certain conditions prevent the patient from being positioned in the conventional side posture for treatment of sacroiliac syndrome (White, 2003; Pooke, 2003; Hyde, 2003; Pretorius, 2003; Haldeman, 2003; Cramer, 2003; Engelbrecht, 2003). Therefore this study aims at determining the efficacy of a maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique.
author Botha, Quentin Martin
author_facet Botha, Quentin Martin
author_sort Botha, Quentin Martin
title The efficacy of a single maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique in the treatment of sacroiliac syndrome
title_short The efficacy of a single maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique in the treatment of sacroiliac syndrome
title_full The efficacy of a single maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique in the treatment of sacroiliac syndrome
title_fullStr The efficacy of a single maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique in the treatment of sacroiliac syndrome
title_full_unstemmed The efficacy of a single maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique in the treatment of sacroiliac syndrome
title_sort efficacy of a single maintained contact drop piece manipulation technique in the treatment of sacroiliac syndrome
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10321/337
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