Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2624533 Manual Therapy 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Delphi study identifying key aspects of performing side-lying lumbar manipulation.•Expert manual therapy practitioners and educators completed three-round survey.•Identified important components of patient position before and during manipulation.•Determined essentials of practitioner position and mechanics during manipulation.•Consensus will help manual therapy educators better teach this technique.

BackgroundSpinal manipulation is an effective intervention for low back pain, yet there is little consistency in how this skill is taught.ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to identify what educators and clinicians believe are important characteristics of the patient and operator position prior to side-lying lumbar manipulation and the patient position and operator motion during the manipulative thrust.DesignA multi-disciplinary correspondence-based Delphi method.MethodsThree rounds of questionnaires were sent to physical therapists, osteopaths and chiropractors. Consensus was established in Round 3 if at least 75% of respondents identified a characteristic as very important/extremely important on a 5-point Likert scale.Results265 educators and clinicians completed the three rounds of questioning. There was consensus that localization to target segment, patient comfort, table height, and logrolling the patient towards the operator are important characteristics of patient position during the preparatory phase. During the manipulation phase, respondents agreed that it is important to maintain localization to the segment and rotate the patient's pelvis and lumbar spine. For the operator characteristics, consensus was reached for the following items; moving up and over the patient, maintaining contact using forearms, and close contact between the operator and patient (preparatory phase); generating force through the body and legs, dropping the body downwards, maintaining localization, and providing a high-velocity and low-amplitude thrust (manipulation phase).ConclusionsThis Delphi study successfully identified key characteristics of patient position and operator position and motion for effective delivery of side-lying lumbar spine manipulations.

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