Showing posts with label clinical prediction rules. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clinical prediction rules. Show all posts
0 comments Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research


I recently came across a paper entitled "A Case of a Potential Manipulation Responder Whose Back Pain Resolved with Flexion Exercises" by Stephen May, MSc and Richard Rosedal, PT, Dip MDT. They present a single patient case study of a LBP patient that met 4 of 5 of the manipulation CPR that drastically improved with flexion exercises but did not receive spinal manipulation.

The authors conclusion(s):

We have presented a case study that was positive for 4 of 5 items of the clinical prediction rule for manipulation responders, but this patient was successfully treated with flexion exercises. The clinical prediction rule may not represent a discrete subgroup but may include patients who can be defectively managed in other ways.
I think the authors are presenting an important point. CPR's must be, for the most part, discreet from other classification, or subgroups of patients. However, this single patient case study is very weak data to lead us to abandon the Manipulation CPR.

Now there is no escaping that this single patient got better. However, one could do a case study in which a person met 4 out 5 of the manipulation CPR and the DID NOT get better at all. That's why larger randomized studies are done and then replicated.

Speaking of replication. The authors suggest that the results of the CPR studies may not work in general as all studies, including the replication study, were done on US military personnel. Specifically -

..this is why once a CPR has been derived in one population it must be validated in a different patient population with different clinicians. The manipulation CPR ahs been so validated, but both derivation and validation studies were performed by specially trained clinicians on US military personnel in military facilities, and the applicability of the results to other patient groups and clinicians is unknown.

In truth, the validation study was done 8 clinics in different regions of the US where "Most participating sites were health care facilities within the U.S. Air Force". Therefore, like in my setting near an Air Force Base, not only military servicemen, but also their families and dependents are treated. Secondly, in the US at least, spinal manipulation is a core skill and intervention taught in physical therapy schools.

In my opinion, the authors true colors about the manipulation CPR are shown with this quote:

If this patient had been treated with manipulation by itself, as she appeared to fit the CPR criteria, this management may have failed to provide the patient with her own ability to control and abolish her symptoms when they returned.

And..

Although it has been directly stated that CPRs are not meant to replace clinical judgment and should be used to complement clinical reasoning, it may also be argued that the use of CPRs minimizes the clinical reasoning process, reducing decision making to a "tick-box" activity to bypass more complex and high-level reasoning that is often required in clinical practice.

The first is a direct dogma held by many "McKenzie" therapist who usually proudly boast not needing to touch a patient to get them better. It's also a Red Herring. To imply that the use of manipulation precludes a competent PT from educating and providing the same means to "self control" their pain is almost pretentious.

The second passage is a classic "Guru" based argument. You can't be providing good results if it's easy or straight forward. One must complete expensive Con Ed after Con Ed to get additional letters after their name and finally portray to the patient the complexity of their pain.
I'm almost saddened as, I feel, McKenzie approach works very well specifically because of it's attempt to subgroup patients, which is what this CPR is striving for. Not because it has a complex model that only those with the money and time (not just access to a well done RCT) can achieve.

Finally, CPRs are used all over in medicine with great results. The Ottawa ankle rule, Canadian C-spine rules, Acute Heart failure index, Short term risk after after a PE, Deep Vein Thrombosis, etc. They are there to help us choose the most appropriate treatment for a patient, which leads to improved outcomes, lower costs, and increased patient satisfaction.

I encourage Mr.'s may and Rosedale to continue with their hypothesis and hopefully tease out what type a subgrouping is more appropriate. I know we've already got authors looking at a potential extension oriented subgroup of LBP patients.

0 comments Sunday, November 25, 2007


Here is a follow up to the Clinical Prediction Rule for Lumbar Manipulation video I posted on a while back. Again, this video is presented by Physical Therapy Students hoping to educate the rest of us on the best treatment choices for our LBP patients. Enjoy!





0 comments Friday, November 16, 2007


Ihave been meaning to blog on the results of a Lancet article finding neither spinal manipulation or NSAIDs are effective on low back pain. However, Eric from NPAThinktank beat me to it with a post on Evidence in Motion's blog. It is very well done and thought out.


The key point we must all understand, is that the population tested was a heterogeneous group of low back pain sufferers. Despite the mounting evidence, no sub-grouping of patient's was done. Predictably, then, to significant results were found. I don't care how many low back pain studies are done, if no treatment based classification is used, you will not find significant results.

Eric quotes Dr. K. Shepard using a great analogy for this. I post it here for your convenience:

A study that randomly assigns patients with low back pain to various conservative treatment protocols will produce the same results as a study that randomly assigns patients with abdominal pain to undergo appendectomy, cholecystectomy, or exploratory laparotomy. Neither study makes any sense.

Our hope in the rehab world is that the referral sources also have the great evidence of treatment based classification and the dramatic effects of lumbar manipulation on the right sub group of low back pain patients. Please read Eric's great post.

0 comments Friday, September 28, 2007


Students from the University of Regis attempt to spread the knowledge regarding the Clinical Prediction Rule for SI manipulation. Fairly corny, but it gets the point across. Appears aimed at the clinician more than a prospective patient.

Are you manipulating your patients that fit the CPR? Change is difficult, but must be made to continue evolving as clinicians and providing the best care known (friggin state of Iowa and their collusion with "Palmerville")



0 comments Sunday, July 22, 2007

Orac over at Respectful Insolence posted his views on chiropractor legalities in New Jersey from an MD's prospective. He also has a few nice things to say about physical therapists.

Be sure to read the comments as their are MD's, chiro pt's, chiros, and (of course) me that have chimed in on this subject.

3 comments Monday, May 21, 2007

In the clinic, on the the web, and at professional meetings, I come across PT's all the time who decry Clinical Prediction Rules (CPR's) as 'cookie cutter PT'. This sentiment seems to come from a varied number of reasons. From fear of change, a feeling that their clinical practice is being dictated to them, and a lack of understanding/ignorance. So, what are clinical prediction rules?

John Childs and Josh Cleland wrote an excellent essay in the January 2006 PT Journal that inspired this blog entry. Their message is that CPR's can:

  • Improve decision making in the PT practice.
  • Provide PTs with diagnostic information gleaned from the H&P the can serve as an accurate predictor calling for more expansive diagnostic testing.
  • Assist with subgrouping patients into more specific classifications that allow for better choices for treatment strategies.
  • Assist in determining when a particular treatment may not be beneficial.
No where does this article indicate patients are treated with a set protocol with no variation or therapist input. That's how I understand "cookie cutter" to be. It does, however, indicate there are specific interventions that need to be included or specific actions that must be completed if a patient is positive for a CPR.

The end goal for CPRs is to help us change our behavior by using treatments and diagnostics most highly supported by the literature. Unfortunately, changing practice patterns is a difficult task for many of us due to comfort, fear of change, or no desire to improve ones practice.