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Sports Performance and Chiropractic
Peer Reviewed Journals:
The use and role of sport chiropractors in the national football
league: a short report. Stump JL, Redwood D. J
Manipulative Physiol Ther 2002 (Mar-Apr); 25 (3): E2
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There is significant chiropractic participation
in US professional football. Certified athletic trainers see a
role for the sport chiropractor in the NFL, primarily as a spinal
specialist treating low back and other musculoskeletal injuries.
A substantial majority of NFL trainers have developed cooperative
relationships with chiropractors, with 77% having referred a player
to a chiropractor. Thirty-one percent of NFL teams have a chiropractor
officially on staff, and an additional 12% of teams refer players
to chiropractors but do not directly retain these chiropractors.
Chiropractic effects on athletic ability. Lauro
A. Mouch B. Chiropractic: The Journal of Chiropractic Research
and Clinical Investigation. 1991; 6: 84-87
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Fifty athletes were tested. They were divided
into two groups. One group received chiropractic adjustments, the
other served as controls. Eleven tests were used to measure aspects
of athletic ability including: agility, balance, kinesthetic perception,
power, and reaction time. After 6 weeks, the control group exhibited
minor improvement in eight of the 11 tests while the chiropractic
group improved significantly in all 11 tests. In a hand reaction
test measuring the speed of reaction with the hand in response
to a visual stimulus, the control group exhibited less than a 1%
response while the chiropractic group exhibited more than an 18%
response after 6 weeks. After 12 weeks the chiropractic group exhibited
more than 30% improvement.
Athletic performance and physiological measures
in baseball players following upper cervical chiropractic care: a
pilot study. Schwartzbauer J, Kolber J, Schwartzbauer,
DC, Hart, JDC, Zhang J. Paper Presented at the National Subluxation
Conference, October 12-13, 1996 Phoenix, Arizona, Sponsored by Sherman
College of Straight Chiropractic. Published in the J
of Vertebral Subluxation Research 1997; 1 (4): 7
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Abstract: The athletic performance
of university baseball player was assessed before, during and after
chiropractic care. Each athlete's performance was evaluated by
athletic abilities, such as the vertical jump, standing road jump.
Linear space (specified), broad jump (specified), muscles strength;
and physiological tests such as electrical cardiogram, blood pressure,
pulse rate and treadmill stress testing. 28 players were recruited
for the study. Twenty players completed the entire experiment with
usable data. All players were randomly divided into control and
experimental groups. Every player was required to complete three
sessions of athletic ability and physiological tests. The first
test was administered before any chiropractic care was given. The
second test was given after six weeks of chiropractic care. The
third test was given after fourteen weeks of chiropractic care.
Only the subjects in the experimental group received chiropractic
adjustments to remove/reduce vertebral subluxation. The results
showed a positive correlation between chiropractic adjustments
and athletic performance.
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Note: In addition to the above
improvements, the chiropractic group showed significant improvement
in capillary count at five and fourteen weeks of chiropractic care.
Since healthy oxygenation of tissues is dependent up blood supply,
this physiologic parameter may be the most important one of all.
Additional publications:
Jocks and Chiropractic Care From: The Latest Stuff
from Gerry by Gerald Clum, DC President of Life Chiropractic
College-West. November 1998 issue (on-line):
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There have been a number of recent high profile
articles and references to world class athletes receiving chiropractic
care. On October 16, USA Today carried an extensive
article about Emmitt Smith with the headline "Cowboys' Smith
still runs ahead of time" with a tag line "Body maintenance
key to longevity for backfield star." The article notes "Smith
will head to his chiropractor." Smith himself commented, "I started
doing this on a regular basis about four or five years ago. I believe
what I am doing is helping me go on. I think Warren Moon does the
same thing. So I've become a big, big believer in servicing my
body and making sure it is lined up properly and functioning the
way it should be on Sundays."
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The San Francisco Chronicle ran an article
a few days later under the headline "Considering the Alternative," which
was a discussion of the use of alternative health care by professional
athletes. "More and more professional athletes are embracing alternative
health practices, forcing teams to acknowledge the effectiveness
of everything from shark cartilage to chiropractic care." "Though
more teams are acknowledging the effectiveness of acupuncture and
chiropractic care, even these practices are considered too unusual
for by some teams. The Chicago Bulls, for example, do not have
a chiropractor on staff, so Scottie Pippen has to hire one on his
own. In the NBA finals in June, Pippen received chiropractic care
at least once during a game-only because he brought the chiropractor
to the game." "Chiropractors are flown in at the player's expense," said
Dr. Malcolm Conway, a chiropractor in Pennsylvania who works with
wide receivers Rocket Ismail and Qadry Ismail and other professional
athletes. "Athletes like Pippen are willing to pay for chiropractic
care because they need to recover quickly from injuries and they
believe chiropractic treatment has a good rate of success." I agree!
References from Koren Publications' brochure:
Sports and Chiropractic
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Green, J. Fort Lauderdale Sun-Tattler,
July 7, 1988. Sec. D. P.1
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Athens, N. Chiropractic Achievers, Nov/Dec
1989, p.38.
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Haldeman, S. "Spinal Manipulative Therapy in
Sports Medicine." Clinics in Sports Medicine 5(1986): p.
277.
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U.S. News and World Report, 31 July,
1989, p.56.
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