Hi Violet
I have only just seen this. Nice of you to think of me.
Firstly let me say I have never said Physical therapy does not work. What I have said is that there is no credible evidence that
myofascial PT can resolve pelvic pain. Patients should be aware of that before they spend money on it. I have also never personally known anyone to recover from it.
After looking at the above I still stand by it. Firstly maybe we should look at the source of this report.
Sport Sciences, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, Toronto, Canada
It has been done by a Sport's study student at a Chiropractic College. Chiropractic treatment is generally categorized as complementary and alternative medicine
(International status, standards, and education of the chiropractic profession". In Haldeman S, Dagenais S, Budgell B et al. (eds0 ). So it has been published by an alternative medicine college. Alternative medicine is a lovely euphmism for unproven. I know we are all aware of what alternative medicine is but I wanted to post this clip as I agree with this very brief summary of it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZLKKW2SQoc ( Dawkins can't resist in having his usual dig at religion at the end of this clip so ignore that bit)
Like many studies that suggest the benefit of an alternative treatment we have no control group as the video explains. In fact this is not even a study, it is not even a group of patients being assesed. It is a single case study, an anecdote.
I think it is healthy to be skeptical of all studies , often the stamp of Peer reviewed can be meaningless. What is important is how the study is designed.
Now I appreciate that many Chiropracters would reject the claim that they practice alternative medicine. However chiropracters have made some pretty dubious claims in the past. In fact there is a whole series of articles about Chiropractic treatment on the website Quack Watch a website which exposes medical quackery. Here are some quotes below and I have provided a link to the Quack watch articles.
Chiropractic's educational system has continued to improve but remains significantly inferior to medical training . In addition, many schools still imbue their students with "philosophy" that leads them astray
Studies conducted by chiropractors and published in "peer reviewed" chiropractic journals often recommend treatment for such conditions as infantile colic and asthma. A study published in the Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics for example, concluded that "Spinal manipulation is effective in relieving infantile colic" —a conclusion not confirmed with reliable, unbiased research and recently refuted by a well designed study by a Norwegian research team .
If you cannot find a chiropractor who is a neuromusculoskeletal specialist or who works in a back-pain clinic as a member of a back-care team, you have to be on guard as an informed consumer if you are to protect yourself from the nonsense associated with chiropractic treatment. There are many chiropractic procedures and techniques you should avoid—some of which are dangerous as well as a waste of time and money
http://www.quackwatch.com/search/webgli ... iropractic
So I think there is some basis to be skeptical.
I appreciate they used the technique of ART. Another alternative medicine technique. I am always a bit concerned when a technique is patented. (®) . Art is apparently a relatively new massage technique.
If I posted a single case study from the
American Medical Association Of Homeopathy explaining how a single person was cured of pudendal nerve entrapment would we take that seriously?
That is not to say the patient in this instance did not get better. Maybe they massaged his OI muscle which relieved pressure on his alcocks canal. It is definitly possible.
However this report is not credible scientific evidence. It is not much different from reading a post on a message board. Call me a cynic but I would argue that what it definitly is is a fantastic advert for Art
(®)
Tried numerous medications as well as a long period of myofascial physical therapy combined with meditation/relaxation. My pelvic floor muscles are now normal and relaxed on exam ( confirmed by many Pelvic floor PTs) yet my pain remains the same. Also have intense leg pain. Deciding on next treatment.