Chiropractic and Mental Health: Connecting the Dots
Manage episode 503222353 series 3643436
Explore the fascinating link between chiropractic care and mental health, a connection increasingly supported by scientific research. While traditional chiropractic outcomes often focus on physical relief from pain and improved mobility, Dr. Mark Studin, a chiropractic family practitioner, consistently observed his patients reporting "deeper" benefits like improved sleep, clearer thinking, better concentration, reduced worry, and increased happiness.
This article delves into the neurological mechanisms behind these profound changes, suggesting that chiropractic care can induce neuroplastic brain changes, specifically improvements in the function of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and cerebellum. These brain regions are crucial for emotional control, mental health, and the integration of internal and external sensory information. Spinal biomechanical lesions (vertebral subluxations) are thought to disrupt afferent input from paraspinal muscles, leading to maladaptive central neural plasticity. Chiropractic adjustments are believed to reverse or improve these maladaptive changes.
Studies using EEG and SEPs have shown that chiropractic adjustments lead to significant changes in brain activity, including increased theta, alpha, and beta power, and a decrease in delta power, suggesting altered brain activity in areas like the default mode network (DMN). Clinically, these changes correlate with reductions in anxiety, depression, fatigue, and pain, alongside enhanced overall quality of life. Given that nearly 1 in 5 U.S. adults experienced mental illness in 2018, this research highlights chiropractic's potential role in addressing this public health crisis, though it is not a replacement for mental health specialists.
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