Chiropractic and Infertility
A study published in the May 2003 issue of the
peer-reviewed Journal of Vertebral Subluxation Research, showed a strong
link between the resolution of infertility and the initiation of
chiropractic care. The study consisted of a retrospective review of 14
separate articles of 15 women suffering with infertility. In each of
these cases chiropractic care was introduced and the results were
documented and published.
The studies followed 15 female subjects ranging in
age from 22 to 65. The prior pregnancy history of these women revealed 11
of them had never gotten pregnant.
Two
of the women had prior successful unassisted pregnancies. One woman had
an assisted pregnancy, while 1 had a history of a miscarriage. In this
group 9 women had previous treatment for infertility before starting
chiropractic and 4 were actually undergoing infertility treatment when
they started chiropractic care.
The study noted the huge expense of infertility
treatment options currently used by many couples noting the range of
expenses can easily go into the thousands. The article also noted that in
vitro fertilization has shown evidence of long term risks. A study
published in November 2002 in the online version of the American Journal
of Human Genetics reported that “babies conceived by in vitro
fertilization may be at increased risk for a rare genetic disorder that
predisposes them to cancer”.
The chiropractic care rendered to the women listed
in this study was from a variety of chiropractors using a variety of
techniques. The focus of the care in these cases was correction of
vertebral subluxations. The research article defined Subluxation by using
the agreed definition of the Association of Chiropractic Colleges.
Subluxation, as defined by the Association of Chiropractic Colleges, is a
“complex of functional and / or structural and / or pathological articular
changes that compromise neural integrity and may influence organ system
function and general health". The study noted that all of the women in
these studies, who were struggling with infertility, had evidence of nerve
system interference, as detected by the presence of subluxations.
The results of these individual case studies showed
that even though many of these women had tried unsuccessfully for some
time to become pregnant, all of the women in this study eventually became
pregnant somewhere between 2 months and 20 months of the onset of
chiropractic care. One of the case studies was summed up by the author,
Elizabeth Anderson-Peacock, DC, DICCP, "Although chiropractic care is not
a treatment for infertility, it is postulated that improvement of spinal
neural integrity through specific chiropractic adjustments may have
contributed to improved homeostasis and physiological adaptation thus
allowing the body to express a greater level of health as an outcome."
|