http://home.earthlink.net/~fourwinds/index.html
for a very positive view of what veterinary chiropractic can offer. For
the opposite view, click on Dr. David Ramey's site at http://www.chirobase.org/06DD/chirovet.html.
- Finally, where mal-alignments are detected, and chiropractic care,
physical therapy or massage is appropriate, it will be recommended. Integration
of these modalities with acupuncture, nutrition, and even medical care may
be recommended for problem cases. Many geriatric cases (dogs and cats
both), referred to Dr. Johnson, have extensive bony/osseous bridging between
spinal vertebrae (spondylosis and discospondylosis). These cases may not
respond to adjustments, and these procedures may be contraindicated. When
spondylosis occurs in a less advanced stage, chiropractic adjustments may be
appropriate.
- Cases that cannot be adjusted, usually respond to
integrated care utilizing acupuncture, clinical nutrition, herbology,
homeopathy, physical therapy, and massage. On occasion, conventional
medical care utilizing drugs in gradually decreasing dosages are indicated,
especially when a patient has become dependent upon steriods (i.e.cortisone,
prednisone), or potent non-steriodal anti-inflammatory drugs (i.e. Rimadyl,
Carprofen).
- The decision of any veterinarian not to use specific
chiropractic techniques does not mean that many other manipulative
techniques are not available. In fact, patients presented with
chronic, difficult problems accompanied by painful musculoskeletal and
fascial restriction may respond to combining various manipulative therapies
and acupuncture. Combining these two approaches is not new in either equine
or in human medical practice.
- For the non-medical people reading this discussion,
it is important to understand the vital role that the fascia, the connective
tissue framework, plays in the structure and function of the body. In
fact, if one were to imagine all the other tissues of the body removed
except for the fascia or connective tissue, the body would still be somewhat
recognizable (less so with a pet that has a thick hair coat).
- Besides giving the body form. the superficial and
deep fascia have electrical properties which allow the entire body to
be interconnected. The acupuncture energy channels also function along these
fascial planes. The holistic practitioner must ascertain whether to
direct the therapy to the outer shell of the patient, or whether specific
organ functions must be addressed on a deeper level. Chiropractic
techniques, Osteopathic techniques, Massage Therapy, Physical Therapy,
Myofascial Release, Lymphatic Manipulation, and Craniosacral Therapy can all
be combined with Acupuncture and Traditional Chinese Medicine to accomplish
the goal of releasing superficial, deep or even organ related fascial
restrictions. When these restrictions are released,
the nervous, circulatory, and lymphatic systems can function more optimally.
From a Traditional Chinese Medical standpoint,
this release represents renewed cirulation of "Qi" (energy) in the
meridians.
- The client who has a pet with chronic problems will want to consider these
concepts, when reading the discussions under Manipulative Therapies,
including the Chiropractic, Physical Therapy and Massage Therapy
sub-sections.
PHYSICAL THERAPY
- According to the A.V.M.A. Guidelines for Alternative and Complementary
Medicine, "Veterinary physical therapy is the use
of noninvasive techniques, excluding
veterinary chiropractic,
for the rehabilitation of injuries in non-human animals. Veterinary
physical therapy performed by non-veterinarians should be limited to the use
of stretching; massage therapy; stimulation by use of (a) low-level
lasers, (b) electrical sources, (c) magnetic
fields, and (d) ultrasound; rehabilitative
exercises; hydrotherapy; and applications
of heat and cold.
- The AVMA Guidelines also state that "veterinary
physical therapy should be performed by a licensed, certified, or registered
veterinary or animal health technician educated in veterinary physical
therapy, or (2) a licensed physical therapist educated in non-human anatomy
and physiology. Veterinary physical therapy
performed by a non-veterinarian should be performed under the supervision
of, or referral by, a licensed veterinarian who is provided concurrent
care."
- The primary goal of physical therapy is the relief
of pain. Another goal is to return full range
of movement and strength to the injured part. Exercise is an
essential ingredient of most physical therapy sessions. Ultrasound may be
used to treat soft-tissue contractures, or even dense connective tissue.
Light therapy (Laser or L.E.P.T.) may also be used to suppress pain when
applied to acupuncture points.
- Animal physical therapy is an emerging profession. New training
opportunities and ongoing research will establish veterinary physical
therapy as a legitimate profession.
- The therapeutic electrical stimulator (TENS unit) is
one of the most versatile modalities available to the physical therapist.
Current electroacupuncture units, including the one that Dr. Johnson
utilizes, also have this capability. These units
relieve pain, stimulate absorption in edema, promote wound healing, and
produce muscle contraction to retard atrophy and reduce spasm.
- Ultrasound
is a
heat-producing modality that can be effective for chronic injuries.
When combined with range-of-motion exercises, ultrasound produces the best
results. When gentle flexion and extension exercises are added after
ultrasound, adhesions are easier to break down, and rehabilitation may be
reduced. These same principles apply to acupuncture, acupressure, spinal
manipulation, hot packs, and massage combined with range-of-motion exercises.
- Due to its ability to raise deep tissue temperature,
ultrasound should only be used by trained personnel.
is
a time-honored method for increasing local circulation and relief of pain.
Hot packs, infrared lamps, electric heating pads (caution), and warm water
baths have all been used with success.
- Ice and compression
should be used more often in our pets that suffer acute trauma, since
the combination immediately reduces intertissue (not major arterial) bleeding
and edema production. The use of cold and compression for as little as 15
minutes results in vessel constriction. This approach not only reduces
swelling but has a local anesthetic effect. Heat can then be applied after 72
hours to increase blood flow, remove waste products from the traumatized area,
and speed healing.
are part of injury rehabilitation and should only be done after heat, massage,
acupuncture, acupressure, or other modalities are used to relax musculature.
Manual stretching for pets should never exceed their pain-free range.
Overstretching can cause damage and inflammation. Manual stretching should be
avoided when acute inflammation is present. (CAVM)
- Therapeutic light therapy
(Laser and
L.E.P.T.) is designed to be used in contact with tissue. For large dogs, there
may be some limitations to this modality, since light does not penetrate much
past 3.5 cm., Dr. Johnson uses photoacupuncture (no needle) for many of his patients, especially cats,
small dogs, and the extremities of larger dogs.
MASSAGE THERAPY
- Massage therapy is one of the oldest health care
disciplines. Chinese medical texts referred to this therapy over 4,000 years
ago. In the fourth century B.C., Hippocrates wrote, "The
physician must be acquainted with many things and assuredly with
rubbing" (the ancient Romans and Greeks referred to massage as
rubbing).
Modern research indicates that massage therapy:
- calms the nervous system and promotes muscle relation
- helps break up scar tissue and adhesions which develop as a result of
injury
- effectively treats chronic inflammatory conditions by increasing
lymphatic circulation
- helps reduce inflammation and swelling from fractures or injuries
- improves blood circulation throughout the entire circulatory system
- can relieve certain types of pain, especially back pain
- promotes recovery from fatigue and pain after hard exercise
- promotes mucous and fluid drainage from the lungs by percussion and
vibration techniques
- can increase peristaltic action in the intestines to promote fecal
elimination (HH)
- Before a therapist or pet owner administers massage
to a pet, a complete diagnosis of the patient's health status must be
obtained. This therapy is hands-on, so there must be communication
and trust.
- Random movements of the hands are ineffective, so
each stroke should have a purpose. The animal
massage therapist or owner must be able to examine muscle for imbalances in
tension, flexibility, strength, and weakness as well as detect areas of tension and
spasm. (CAVM)
- For specific massage techniques, one can contact the
website provided by AMTIL (Animal Massage & Therapies) in conjunction with IAATH
(International Alliance for Animal Therapy and Healing) at www.amtil.com, then click on to view Petting With A Purpose: The Massage You Already
Know and Nine Ways To Do It Better. You will need adobe reader, however
it can be downloaded from this site for free, if you don't have it.
- Traditional European massage
includes Swedish massage. The basic idea is that by stroking and
kneading the top layers of muscle, you can improve blood flow through the soft
tissues. Swedish massage and related techniques involve five different kinds
of strokes, some of which have formal names in French such as long strokes
(effleurage) kneading (petrissage), friction, vibration and percussion or
tapping (tapotement). The idea is to relax muscles, stimulate circulation, and
increase range of motion.
- Contemporary Western massage
emphasize the "balancing of mind, body, and spirit" and includes:
Deep tissue massage
.
This massage takes aim at deeper layers of muscle than Swedish massage by
directing strong, slow strokes against the grain of the muscle. This massage
focuses on more specific areas than Swedish massage
Esalen massage.
This method transforms Swedish massage techniques into slow rhythmic, and
hypnotic stokes and combines them with gentle rocking and stretching movements.
Manual lymph drainage massage.
This method is often used in any condition that blocks the lymph flow, such as
edema.
Myofascial release.
During this technique, the therapist uses gentle prolonged pressure to soften up
connective tissue called fascia. Myofascial release is often used to treat
chronic pain or to restore range of motion
Neuromuscular massage, trigger point massage, and
myotherapy. These techniques are often used for pain control.
Neuromuscular massage concentrates finger pressure deep into individual muscles
to increase blood flow and release "knots" of tension and pressure on
nerves. One form of this kind of massage is called "trigger point
massage", because the therapist works on specific points on the body that
trigger pain in other areas. If neuromuscular massage is used to control muscle
spasms and other muscle related conditions, it's sometimes called "myotherapy."
(AMFD).
:
Bodywork is everywhere you go today. The various names have exotic sounding
names, however bodywork is just a form of massage (sometimes without actual
skin contact or movement instruction that aims at both physical and
psychological well-being of the patient. Sometimes the term
"bodywork" means certain Western based techniques that emphasize
body structure and movement. These techniques are called structural,
functional, and movement integration. Sometimes "bodywork" can also
mean certain Asian massage approaches and/or bio-energetic approaches such as
therapeutic touch and polarity therapy. Sometimes "bodywork" can
mean all of the above, plus conventional massage techniques.
Almost all the "evidence" proving that these "bodywork"
techniques do what they claim to do are anecdotes or personal testimonials. It
is clear that some of these techniques free up stiff muscles, improve
coordination and balance, and can aid the patient to relax. There
is no scientific evidence to prove that these techniques can cure arthritis,
asthma, heart problems or any other chronic disease.
The point is this: if conventional physical therapy,
or other medical or more conventional alternative approaches aren't helping,
you may want to give one or more of these techniques a try. As a
general statement, they will not hurt you or your pet, and there are plenty of
these "bodywork professionals" available around any major city in
the United States.
Acupressure and Shiatsu: Let's start out with these techniques,
since in this practitioners experience, it has been successful in his animal
patients. Acupressure is essentially acupuncture without
the needles. It is a form of massage, during which the practitioner uses
fingertips or hands, to press specific points along the meridians that affect
the flow of "Qi" (energy) (visit our Acupuncture page).
Acupressure massage
requires
a working knowledge of the acupuncture point locations, and the
interrelationship of these points with their related organs.
Acupressure massage and trigger-point massage are similar in technique, but
different in theory. The acupressure treatment approach centers on the Chinese
meridian theory, which postulates that all organs of the body are connected by
a network through which energy ("Qi") flows. A
high degree of correlation exists between the location of acupuncture points
and trigger points on the skin (CAVM). The reader can check out the
discussion on our Acupuncture page for better understanding.
Acupressure can be an excellent follow-up to
acupuncture, resulting in augmentation of the therapy. This is
particularly helpful in patients that really need acupuncture three times a
week, but whose owners can afford it, only once/week. Also, it has been this
practitioners experience, that even those that can afford acupuncture three
times/ week can not logistically swing that many appointments, either in the
office or house call environment.
Acupressure has a number of variations
including: Shiatsu (deep finger pressure), Tui
Na (acupressure mixed with tapping, vibration, rubbing, and kneading),
An-mo (combines bodywork, diet, vitamin
supplementation, and herbs), Jin Shin Do
(method emphasizes tension in one part of the body affects other parts), Jin
Shin Jyusu (after pulse analysis the practitioner gently touches two
of 26 specific acupuncture points to clear the meridian affected).
For humans, Qi Gong and Tai
Chi belong in this general category. Many clients are familiar with
these terms.
: These examples of
Western massage are also called structural, functional, and movement
integration. They include Rolfing
(structural integration), Hellerwork, Aston
patterning, Feldenkrais Method,
Alexander Technique, Pilates/Physicalmind
Method, and Tragerwork.
- Bioenergetics and Biofield Therapeutics.
Therapeutic touch
, which is essentially
touch-free massage, is taught at over 100 prominent medical and nursing
schools and is used around the world to treat problems ranging from cancer to
burns. Healers say they they "manipulate" a patients energy field
merely by passing their hands over the patient's body and feeling compassion
for them. The term "therapeutic touch" has two
meanings depending on who you're talking to. Some people use
therapeutic touch to mean the vague healing power that comes from massage,
hugs, and general human contact. Other people use the term to mean a specific
kind of bodywork during which a therapist manipulates a patient's invisible
energy fields by moving his or her hands over them without actually touching the
patient. (AMFD).
Polarity therapy, Reiki,
and Reflexology fall into this category.
Many of Dr. Johnson's clients are either clients of Reiki
practitioners, or are actual Reiki Masters. The
point for any veterinarian viewing this website is this: these modalities are
not only being used on humans, but many clients believe these methods also
benefit their pets.
- Crainosacral Therapy: Craniosacral
therapy manipulates the bones of the skull to treat a range of conditions,
from ear infection to stroke, spinal cord injury. There is a rhymical
motion in the craniosacral system created by the rise and fall of
cerebrospinal fluid pressure. The cranial therapist is trained to
"palpate" or feel with his or her hands, the motion of the
craniosacral system.
The touch is extremely gentle and sensitive, and an experienced
practitioner is able to diagnose the movement of the system as a whole by
locating critical points of restriction in the cranium. When
abnormal motion is detected, the therapist locates the point of restricted
movement and brings about a release by gently tractioning and elongating the
meningeal membranes.
Dr. John Upledger, an osteopathic physician is the
inventor of the menigeal approach to craniosacral therapy. He has
taught this approach to thousands worldwide. Dr. Johnson has visited the
Upledger Institute, and is personally acquainted with its founder Dr. John
Upledger. He has personally observed Dr. Upledger with human patients before,
during and after procedures. Dr. Johnson has discussed
with Dr. Upledger and several members of his staff the potential application
of these techniques for dogs, cats, and horses.
The Upledger Institute already has in place Bioaquatic Exploration
workshops with Dolphins. Although there is no immediate
proven application for dogs and cats, Dr. Johnson has provided a link to Dr.
Upledger's website at www.upledger.com,
where one can become more familiar with a therapy which
offers great potential in veterinary integrative medicine.