Skip to main content

Subluxation: dogma or science?

Abstract

Subluxation syndrome is a legitimate, potentially testable, theoretical construct for which there is little experimental evidence. Acceptable as hypothesis, the widespread assertion of the clinical meaningfulness of this notion brings ridicule from the scientific and health care communities and confusion within the chiropractic profession. We believe that an evidence-orientation among chiropractors requires that we distinguish between subluxation dogma vs. subluxation as the potential focus of clinical research. We lament efforts to generate unity within the profession through consensus statements concerning subluxation dogma, and believe that cultural authority will continue to elude us so long as we assert dogma as though it were validated clinical theory.

Background

Status of a Construct

More than twenty years ago Donald K. Moon, D.C. wrote of a "flight from the subluxation" among chiropractors [1]. Dr. Moon, a firm believer in the validity of the traditional chiropractic lesion, bemoaned the dearth of scientific data to substantiate the construct, and warned of the possibility that medical researchers would step in to fill the void created by chiropractors' indolence. He decried the tendency among many chiropractors to pit diagnosis against spinal analysis (i.e., subluxation-detection), as though the two were mutually exclusive.

In the years since, some members of the profession have developed scientific skills, and a literature bearing on the usefulness of spinal manipulation, generated by chiropractors and others, has evolved [e.g., [2–5]]. In the United States several chiropractic colleges have been the recipients of federal funds for scientific investigations, and a consortial center for investigations has been established at Palmer College of Chiropractic with federal money. University-based chiropractic schools have been established in several nations [6], and the scholarly works of chiropractors are now much more widely disseminated in chiropractic and non-chiropractic periodicals. The profession may look upon these developments and say with some pride that, indeed, there is a small but meaningful scientific literature in chiropractic [7, 8].

Despite these accomplishments, many chiropractors preeminent theoretical construct remains unsubstantiated [9–11], and largely untested [12]. This lack of evidence may reflect a lack of interest among those with research skills; Nelson [11] observed that "clinical studies of the effectiveness of spinal manipulation are conducted and reported without reference to the presence or absence or even the existence of subluxations". The chiropractic subluxation stands pretty much today as it did at the dawn of the 20th century: an interesting notion without validation. And, as it has throughout the past century, D.D. Palmer's mediating variable remains a "bone of contention" between many chiropractors and the scientific community, as well as among chiropractors themselves.

Although books and monographs have been written about the presumed entity [e.g., [13–16]], and intra-professional political consensuses [17–19] have been reached on fuzzy conceptual definitions and unjustified claims (Table 1), little if any substantive experimental evidence for any operational definition of the chiropractic lesion has been offered in clinical trials. Notwithstanding strong intra-professional commitment to the subluxation construct [20, 21] and reimbursement strategies that are legally based upon subluxation [22], there is today no scientific "gold standard" (10) for detecting these reputedly ubiquitous and supposedly significant clinical entities, and inadequate basic science data to illuminate the phenomenon [11, 23]. The chiropractic subluxation continues to have as much or more political than scientific meaning [24].

Table 1 Assertions about subluxation offered by several chiropractic organizations [17-19]

We believe that Dr. Moon's concerns were only partly justified. All in all, there has been no flight from the subluxation on the part of the field or its leaders [e.g., [25, 26]], nor much move towards it either (on the part of the profession's scholars) [12]. The profession – its rank-and-file and political leadership (see Figure 1) – has not abandoned the subluxation as an a priori principle guiding many of its activities. The chiropractic subluxation and subluxation-related beliefs permeate the practice of chiropractic, the marketing rhetoric offered by many chiropractors, the legal and political strategies pursued by various trade associations, and the sense of identity for many in the profession... all this for a hypothetical construct whose relevance for health and illness has yet to be established.

Figure 1
figure 1

Political statement rendered on a button by the American Chiropractic Association, 2003.

The traditional chiropractic lesion has not been the focus of systematic clinical research for the purpose of determining its meaningfulness (or lack thereof). In the absence of scientific validation, the propagation of unsubstantiated claims for many chiropractors favorite mediating variable is an obstacle to scientific credibility and cultural authority for the profession. It is our purpose to remind the profession of the implications and consequences of offering subluxation dogmatically, rather than as a plausible and testable proposition.

Discussion

The Dogma of Subluxation

The spinal subluxation, though we have been correcting it with spinal adjustment for 100 years, is not fully understood. Scientific research presently is not sophisticated enough to determine the neurophysiological impact that spinal subluxation has on our patients. Does that mean that we do not adjust our patients because it has not been proven? Absolutely not. I treat my patients as if each spinal adjustment has a virtually unlimited potential in improving their health... [27].

So wrote a member of the American Chiropractic Association's (ACA's) governing board in the centennial year of the profession. We might applaud the good doctor for acknowledging the inadequacy of basic research bearing on the subluxation; on the other hand, no recognition is given that the clinical meaningfulness of subluxation has yet to be established. One can only speculate what it means to treat every patient "as if each spinal adjustment has a virtually unlimited potential."

The dogmatic character of subluxation beliefs is exemplified by several assertions offered by the Association of Chiropractic Colleges (ACC) (see Table 1). Intended as a means of fostering greater unity among the chiropractic colleges, the ACC's "Paradigm" statement on subluxations has since been widely endorsed by national and international membership societies [28]. In effect, the ACC Paradigm has become the standard (if not official) position of a broad segment of the profession. There are several problems with the Paradigm.

First, the hypothesis that subluxation is some "complex of functional and/or structural and/or pathological articular changes that compromise neural integrity" is offered without qualification, that is, without mention of the tentative, largely untested quality of this claim. (As well, a stubbed toe would seem to meet the fuzzy criteria provided by the ACC.) The nature of the supposed compromise of "neural integrity" is unmentioned.

Secondly, the dogmatism of the ACC's unsubstantiated claim that subluxations "may influence organ system function and general health" is not spared by the qualifier "may." The phrase could mean that subluxations influence "organ system function and general health" in some but not all cases, or that subluxation may not have any health consequences. Although the latter interpretation is tantamount to acknowledging the hypothetical status of subluxation's putative effects, this meaning seems unlikely in light of the ACC's statement that chiropractic addresses the "preservation and restoration of health" through its focus on subluxation. Both interpretations beg the scientific questions: do subluxation and its correction "influence organ system function and general health"?

Lastly, the ACC claims that chiropractors use the "best available rational and empirical evidence" to detect and correct subluxations. This strikes us as pseudoscience, since the ACC does not offer any evidence for the assertions they make, and since the sum of all the evidence that we are aware of does not permit a conclusion about the clinical meaningfulness of subluxation. To the best of our knowledge, the available literature does not point to any preferred method of subluxation detection and correction, nor to any clinically practical method of quantifying compromised "neural integrity," nor to any health benefit likely to result from subluxation correction.

All in all, the ambiguities that permeate the ACC's statements on subluxation render it inadequate as a guide to clinical research. Although Wenban [29] proposes that the ACC statements on subluxation might be construed as "a very simplified map, for starting to find the future practice-relevant research priorities for chiropractic," he offers no suggestion that ACC's "map" is any improvement upon existing proposals for subluxation research strategies [e.g., [10, 23, 30]]. Owens [31] suggests that consensus models of subluxation are "useless for research purposes." Concerning the ACC's statements about subluxation, a signatory to the document asserts, "This paradigm was never intended to be a testable research hypothesis. It was constructed by a process of consensus to serve as a collective political statement, not a research hypothesis" [32]. More to the point of research need is a validated operational definition of subluxation [31]. Nelson [33] advises that "Whether chiropractors are actually treating lesions, or not, is a question of immense clinical and professional consequence. Resolution of the controversy will not be found through consensus panels nor through semantic tinkering, but through proposing and testing relevant hypotheses."

Whether the ACC's subluxation claims have succeeded as a political statement is beyond our concern here. These assertions were published as a priori truths (what many chiropractors have traditionally referred to as "principle"), and are exemplary of scientifically unjustified assertions made in many corners of the profession [34–36]. It matters not whether unsubstantiated assertions are offered for clinical, political, scientific, educational, marketing or other purposes; when offered without acknowledgment of their tentative character, they amount to dogmatism.

We contend that attempts to foster unity (among the schools or in the wider profession) at the expense of scientific integrity is ultimately self-defeating. To be sure, the profession's lack of cultural authority is based in part upon our characteristic disunity. However, attempts to generate unity by adoption of a common dogma can only bring scorn and continued alienation from the wider health care community and the public we all serve.

Subluxation Semantics

The subluxation is identified by a great many names [37], but neither the abundance of labels nor efforts to reach consensus on terminology tell us anything about the validity of the construct. Nelson [11] points out that "...framing the subluxation debate as a semantic issue, resolvable by consensus, is precisely the same as asking whether we should refer to the spaceships used by aliens as flying saucers or UFOs." Neither adoption nor rejection of the term subluxation or any of its myriad synonyms will resolve the problem created by assuming a priori that subluxation is clinically meaningful. If and when we demonstrate that there are alien spaceships hovering over us, we suspect an appropriate terminology will develop on its own.

The clinical meaningfulness, if any, of subluxation cannot be established by definition. The notion that subluxation is inherently pathological, perhaps because some dictionary equates subluxation with ligamentous sprain, does not mean that joint dysfunction merits clinical intervention. Skin tags too might be considered pathological, but the mere presence of aberration or abnormality does not indicate a serious or treatment-worthy health problem. (The unfortunate lesson of decades of surgical intervention for bulging discs, performed in the hope of relieving back pain, seems all too frequently lost on many chiropractors.) We cannot establish the clinical meaningfulness of subluxation merely by branding it pathological; such would be word magic.

This is not to say that efforts to develop a standardized lexicon among chiropractors [e.g., [38]] are without merit. We think it important and useful, for example, to distinguish between the "orthopedic subluxation" [39] vs. "subluxation syndrome" [38]. The former is a more or less observable phenomenon recognized within and beyond chiropractic's borders. The latter is a theoretical notion, which relates subluxation of joints to deleterious health consequences, and is a testable, but largely untested proposition. This is no small distinction.

Subluxation in Practice

As a pragmatic matter, subluxation refers to the target of many chiropractors manual interventions, and the individual practitioner may select from a range of theories, techniques and supposed clinical implications of the traditional chiropractic lesion. The latter include subluxation as a cause of musculoskeletal problems, as an etiological factor in various internal disorders and behavioral/psychological problems, and as a strategic intervention site for disease prevention and wellness enhancement. Hundreds of brand-name techniques have been offered for the purpose of correcting subluxations [13], but the clinical usefulness of subluxation correction has yet to be experimentally demonstrated.

The diversity of altered function attributed to subluxation and "nerve interference" parallels in some respects the "nervism" [40] and "spinal irritation" [41] of nineteenth century neurology and physiology. When coupled with vitalistic concepts of "Innate Intelligence," subluxation theories expand upon the "nature-trusting heresy" [42] of those earlier times. Unlike the therapeutic nihilism recommended by some nineteenth century physicians, many chiropractors' faith in nature gives rise to extensive regimens of subluxation correction [43]. The breadth of contemporary, uncritical speculations bearing on subluxation is captured in the boast of a chiropractic leader: "Rigor mortis is the only thing we can't help" [44]. Seaman [45] argues that "many chiropractic practices are guided by dogmatism instead of philosophy and science." In short, many chiropractors practice as though subluxation is clinically relevant, but seemingly without recognition that maybe it's not. When challenged, many chiropractors respond not with data, but by avowing "the chiropractic principle": subluxation.

The National Board of Chiropractic Examiners offers that: "By manually manipulating vertebrae into their normal physiological relationship, chiropractic practitioners relieve interference with the nervous system along with accompanying symptoms. This correction of joint dysfunction reestablishes normal mobility and comfort... Chiropractors see patients with spinal subluxations and joint dysfunction on a daily basis..." [[46], pp. 2, 53]. Chiropractors list "spinal subluxation/joint dysfunction" as the most frequent of all "conditions" they encounter [[46], pp. 53, 84, 101].

The magic and mystery of subluxation theories all too frequently direct the chiropractor's attention away from the legitimate question of whether subluxation (or any other rationale for manipulation) may be relevant in a patient's health problem, to a search for the "right" vertebra. Individual clinicians derive subluxation theories about particular spinal regions as "keys" to better health or to the resolution of particular disorders. For example, the subluxation sites for which adjustment has been suggested to relieve enuresis range from heads to tails [47–56]. Disciples of B.J. Palmer often restrict themselves to the upper cervical spine, while adherents to Logan's Basic Technique tend to focus on the sacrum. Sacro-occipital technique practitioners work at both ends of the spine. The problem is not the fertile diversity of subluxation hypotheses, but rather that the possible irrelevance of subluxation and adjustment is so infrequently addressed [e.g., [55, 56]]. Many chiropractors (and others) have often been more disposed to ask where the subluxation is rather than whether subluxation correction is relevant or warranted.

The popularity of the subluxation construct is reflected in the variety of brand-name clinical techniques vended in the profession [e.g., [57–60]], many of which concern methods of subluxation detection and correction (see Table 2). We propose that the ubiquity and commercial success of these clinical procedures speak to the credence those doctors of chiropractic place in the various iterations of subluxation theories. Comparable claims for the clinical meaningfulness of subluxation may be found at the websites of several chiropractic colleges [36] and in the patient brochures distributed by major provincial, state and national membership societies of chiropractors in Canada and the United States (34). Many chiropractors bombard themselves and the public with subluxation rhetoric, but rarely hint at the investigational status of this cherished idea.

Table 2 Assertions about subluxation made by several brand-name technique organizations of chiropractic

It has been our informal experience that subluxation is an unchallenged notion for many in the profession; Clum [39] concurs. Among the likely consequences of this unskeptical acceptance are evaluations and interventions that fail to address outcomes (in favor of focus on the presumed mediator: subluxation), excessive treatment (to correct something that may not be relevant: subluxation), unnecessary hazards (e.g., x-ray exposure in the quest for subluxation correction), and delay of appropriate care (through failure to diagnose and/or failure to seek alternative care). Subluxation, a construct that might be a source of guidance to chiropractors (were it to be rigorously investigated and validated), instead functions to distract us from the profession's prime directive: patient benefit.

Subluxation in Marketing

The widespread use of unsubstantiated claims for subluxation and their adjustive correction in marketing to patients [e.g., [57–60]] and to prospective chiropractic students has been noted elsewhere [34, 36]. Seaman [45] observes that:

...chiropractors [are] chastised as being "unscientific quacks"... Mostly, it has to do with claims that chiropractors make in marketing their services. Chiropractors are notorious for making treatment claims about chiropractic care that go well beyond the limits of our supportive data, whereas other professionals do not. Consequently, it is the chiropractor who looks like, and subsequently deserves to be called, an amateurish, unscientific huckster.

Some chiropractic suppliers are quite willing to jump on the unsubstantiated bandwagon of the subluxation, as the following promotion for nutritional products suggests:

The practice of Chiropractic is based upon the detection, correction and prevention of the Vertebral Subluxation Complex (VSC)...

The goal of chiropractic care is to restore function to the damaged spine as quickly as possible to minimize the damaging effects of the VSC and the consequential degenerative changes... Current medical literature indicates that specific nutrients can also play an essential and integral role in the support of VSC... [61].

Suffice it to say that the marketing assertions for the value of chiropractic care, frequently offered without acknowledgment of their non-validated status, are commonplace in the profession. The deleterious consequences attributed to subluxation and the clinical outcomes predicted for subluxation correction range from the dread of "killer subluxations" [62] to predictions of "optimal well being" [18] and attainment of maximum human potential. An advertisement that one chiropractor considers in poor taste may profess sacred truth for the next. Since substantiation of assertions may not be considered important to marketers, there are often no scientific boundaries to non-evidence-based chiropractic. Anything goes.

Subluxation as Legal & Political Strategy

The chiropractic subluxation began its legal relevance when the term was included in the wording of various statutes governing the practice of the chiropractic healing art. This trend was continued in the profession's quest for inclusion in the USA Medicare program more than 30 years ago. American chiropractors were chagrined for many years that payment for services in this federal program required radiographic "evidence" of subluxation, but did not compensate the chiropractor for the x-ray films; this stipulation has been eliminated. Many chiropractors now seek to secure their participation in Medicare (despite a skeptical medical community and the availability of manipulative services from non-chiropractor providers) by challenging the federal bureaucracy's interpretation of the Medicare statute.

In their recent "Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Its Cross-motion for Summary Judgment" to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in a suit against the U.S. Department of Health to establish chiropractors' exclusive right to reimbursement for "manipulation to correct a subluxation" in the Medicare program, attorneys for the ACA argue that:

The ACA has presented substantial evidence that Congress did not intend that the services of medical doctors and osteopaths would overlap with the services of chiropractors. In fact, the ACA has clearly demonstrated the illogical paradox of the Secretary's interpretation, namely, that Congress would have had to intended that medical doctors and osteopaths were going to engage in a form of treatment that they believed to be cultist, in order to treat a condition that they did not believe existed, via a treatment method that they did not believe was possible. Surely this type of reasoning would have been absurd, and Congress could not have had that intention when it passed the amendments to the Social Security Act... [63].

The irony here is extreme. Having established the legal meaningfulness of a hypothetical construct whose clinical relevance has yet (if ever) to be scientifically demonstrated, chiropractors now find themselves competing with physical therapists and others over the right to correct subluxations. The greatest absurdity of the situation appears to be missed by all parties concerned: subluxation is "real" because Congress has said so. Data seem irrelevant in this context. Monetary concerns clearly outweigh the issue of scientific validation, and the dogma of subluxation has now spread beyond the chiropractic profession.

Subluxation as Identity

Chiropractors since the Palmers have defined the profession by its focus on finding and adjusting subluxations. Intra-professional feuds have raged over just how exclusive this focus should be, but with few exceptions [e.g., [11, 62, 64, 65]], allegiance is widely pledged to the traditional chiropractic lesion (e.g., Table 1). Clum [39] observes that for some chiropractors "the concept of vertebral subluxation is synonymous with chiropractic and its role has never been questioned." The subluxation is viewed by some chiropractors as a matter of "honor" [66]; anyone who questions the subluxation construct risks vilification as a heretic [66, 67]. "Subluxation goes beyond metaphor; it is at the heart of chiropractic" [68]. The International Chiropractors' Association's (ICA's) president seeks a public relations campaign to make subluxation a "household word," and sees the ACC's paradigm as "a really good start" [69]. Edwards [25] insists that the American Chiropractic Association, the world's largest membership society of chiropractors, is no less committed to subluxation than is the Palmer-founded ICA. Gelardi [70] would define the chiropractic profession by its "mission"; his preferred mission is "to contribute to health through the correction of vertebral subluxation." Rome [37] argues that chiropractors' unique subluxation terminology is essential to the preservation of a unique identity. The endorsement of the ACC's statements on subluxation by national membership societies [28] constitutes additional affirmation of the sense among many chiropractic leaders of what a chiropractor is: a subluxation doctor.

Chiropractors' insistence upon defining the profession in terms of a hypothetical (and largely untested) construct is foolish at best: subluxation may or may not be a meaningful notion. This commitment also augurs against the conduct of clinical research to confirm or refute the utility of the subluxation construct, firstly because the presumption of validity undermines the motivation to investigate, and secondly because such research has the potential of undermining this proposed identity (i.e., subluxation doctor). The erosion of reimbursement for chiropractic services is also a possibility if subluxation research fails to measure up to expectations.

Ironically, there is an image of the chiropractor, which seems reasonably well-accepted by many members of the public and whose basis has already garnered some substantial research support [2, 3]: the chiropractor as provider of manipulative/adjustive services. Whether the profession can loosen its self-imposed shackle to subluxation dogma is unclear.

Subluxation as Hypotheses

Chiropractors' reluctance to construe subluxation as hypothesis may derive in part from the limited consideration given to epistemology. Epistemology is that branch of philosophy, which deals with the nature of knowledge. Within the context of a clinical discipline such as chiropractic, epistemology addresses the means by which we may gain understanding about the nature of patients' problems, determine optimal methods of resolving or alleviating these problems, and appreciate the mechanisms by which successful interventions are accomplished. Chiropractors have traditionally offered a wide range of epistemological and reasoning strategies [7, 71–80], including divine or spiritual inspiration, uncritical empiricism, uncritical rationalism (also referred to as "deductive science" [79]), truth by fiat (e.g., "the chiropractic principle": subluxation), and the critical rationalism and empiricism of the scientific method.

The confusion and incompatibility of these many epistemologies has arisen within a profession, which evolved outside of mainstream higher education and in its early years had little or no sophistication in the realm of scientific investigation [81, 82]. Although scholarly and scientific sophistication has emerged in recent decades [83], it appears to be limited to a minority segment of the profession [e.g., [84]]. Inter-professional political pressures may offer a partial explanation for this [85]. Resistance to including chiropractic training within public universities may be more symptomatic than explanatory of the profession's scientific ennui, but the dearth of formal training programs for chiropractor-scientists at chiropractic colleges certainly suggests inadequate concern for the epistemological (i.e., scientific) bases for theories and practice in the profession.

For whatever the reasons, many in the chiropractic profession in the North American continent and in Australia and New Zealand remain committed to a dogmatic orientation to subluxation, its supposed health consequences and the putative benefits to be derived from subluxation-correction [17–19]. Although the percentage of chiropractors who adhere to dogmatism is not known, a 1994 sample of Canadian chiropractors was intriguing [86]. While 86% believed that chiropractors' methods should be validated, 74% disagreed that controlled trials are the best way to accomplish this. And though most (52%) disagreed that "The subluxation is the cause of many diseases," 68% agreed with the notion that "most diseases are caused by spinal malalignment" and most believed that subluxation was detectable by x-ray. Unfortunately, the survey methodology does not allow one to determine the tentative (hypothetical) vs. dogmatic quality of these beliefs.

The traditional chiropractic lesion is often seen as a "philosophical" truth or principle, something that must be defended rather than investigated [87]. This unfortunate pitting of "chiropractic principle" [67] against research scrutiny is often couched in terms of a conflict between philosophy and science:

...It is my contention that a battle between philosophy and science does not and cannot exist within the chiropractic profession or any other discipline. I contend that the real battle is between the great majority of chiropractors who unknowingly allow dogmatism to guide the practice of chiropractic and the extremely rare variety of chiropractor who's practice of chiropractic is guided by philosophy and science [45].

There is nothing inherently dogmatic or anti-scientific in the notion that an articular lesion may have health consequences, or that correction of joint dysfunction may relieve symptoms and/or improve health. Neither does our current inability to predict the effects (if any) of subluxation [88] and/or the benefits of subluxation-correction relegate this hypothetical construct to the dustbin of clinical theories. Indeed, it would be just as inappropriate to dispose of this largely untested theory without data as it is to proclaim its meaningfulness without adequate evidence. On the other hand, as Carl Sagan suggested, extraordinary claims will require extraordinary evidence. With respect to the supposed mechanisms of adjusting, Haldeman [23] reminds us that "What must be avoided... is the unreasonable extrapolation of current knowledge into speculation and presentation of theory as fact." Given the current deficiency of empirical data, the only sound scientific-epistemological position that we can conceive of is to acknowledge our ignorance: we don't know if subluxation is clinically meaningful or not. We suggest that this is a requisite first step toward greater wisdom concerning subluxation.

A Simple Alternative

Speculations and tentative assertions are the stuff from which rigorous science emerges [71]. Indeed, there are those rare scientists whose enduring contributions have derived as much or more from what they theorized than from what they actually tested experimentally (e.g., Isaac Newton and the motions of the planets; Albert Einstein and relativity; Linus Pauling and the role of the hemoglobin molecule in sickle-cell anemia). Hypothetical constructs such as the chiropractic lesion, emotional stress and the neurotic syndromes may or may not have important implications for human biology, but it is entirely appropriate to offer such ideas as tentative assertions.

We could, as C.O. Watkins, D.C. urged decades ago, resolve to be bold in what we hypothesize but cautious and humble in what we claim. In discussing subluxation, all chiropractors should learn to use language that denotes the tentative character of many of our beliefs (hypotheses). Those chiropractors who suspect that subluxation has significant health implications could resolve to investigate scientifically (e.g., through meticulous case reporting), or at least to financially support rigorous investigations, of the meaningfulness of subluxation and its correction. The leaders of our colleges, membership societies and agencies could qualify their statements about subluxation by admitting up front that subluxation is hypothesis(es), not an experimentally demonstrated reality. Those who speak for the profession and who operate in the political, legal and legislative arenas could advance the cultural authority of the profession by becoming credible, balanced, evidence-based sources of information about the chiropractic art. The chiropractic rank-and-file could be encouraged to recognize that responding to charges of quackery with unsubstantiated claims for subluxation and for the outcomes of chiropractic care is self-defeating. Marketers could eliminate the spizzerinctum and hype in their advertisements and concentrate on those aspects of chiropractic for which good data already exist. Speculations could be identified as such, so as not to violate the public's trust and enfeeble the profession's best efforts to progress.

How can such profound change in the profession come about? A century of criticisms by political medicine, many of them not unlike those we offer, has only hardened many chiropractors' attitudes [85]. However, the purpose here is not to contain and eliminate the chiropractic profession, but rather to challenge dogmatic adherence to a hypothetical construct and to help to remedy the many problems that dogmatism has cost the profession. We believe that chiropractic should proceed as a first-class clinical science and art, a profession whose members appreciate and acknowledge what is known and what is not, provide patients with the best care possible given current knowledge, and resolve to extend the borders of scientific understanding in the interest of the public we serve.

The metamorphosis we seek begins with the individual chiropractor who is willing to challenge tradition and peers in the interest of greater integrity for the profession and greater benefit for patients. There is a silent minority who recognize the inappropriateness of the prevailing consensus of dogma concerning subluxation. We recommend that individuals and small groups speak out, educate peers about the distinction between subluxation as hypothesis versus subluxation as dogma, and assert their dissatisfaction with unsubstantiated claims made for the traditional chiropractic lesion. "Silence is not golden: it's consent" [89].

We ask that those who guide the profession and who understand the dilemma that subluxation dogma causes the profession, lead by word and example. Whether one is college faculty or administrator, association official or appointee to a licensing authority, a willingness to reframe subluxation as something tentative rather than something certain is essential. Silence can only serve to sustain our century-long, epistemological misunderstanding of the subluxation construct and corrupt the fullest expression of a worthy future.

Summary

Hypothetical constructs involve tentative assertions about physical reality. They serve as essential tools in the development of science, and permit the empirical testing of the non-obvious. However, when the speculative nature of an hypothesis or hypothetical construct is not made obvious, an otherwise acceptable proposition becomes a dogmatic claim. Such is the history of subluxation in chiropractic.

This brief review of the role of subluxation dogma in clinical practice, in marketing, in the legal and political arenas, as a basis for professional identity, and in the rhetoric of leading chiropractic organizations and agencies, is not a statement about subluxation's validity or lack thereof. Only focused clinical research will enable us to determine whether the traditional chiropractic lesion merits clinicians' attention. We don't know whether subluxation is meaningful or not.

The dogma of subluxation is perhaps the greatest single barrier to professional development for chiropractors. It skews the practice of the art in directions that bring ridicule from the scientific community and uncertainty among the public. Failure to challenge subluxation dogma perpetuates a marketing tradition that inevitably prompts charges of quackery. Subluxation dogma leads to legal and political strategies that may amount to a house of cards and warp the profession's sense of self and of mission. Commitment to this dogma undermines the motivation for scientific investigation of subluxation as hypothesis, and so perpetuates the cycle.

The simple expedient of amending dogmatic assertions to note their tentative, hypothetical character could do much to improve the image of the profession, to re-orient it to the challenge of testing its cherished hypotheses and to establishing the cultural authority of chiropractors in our unique realm of health care. The task of reorienting the profession to a credible science and art belongs to all who understand the scourge of dogma, and who seek a brighter future for the chiropractic profession and its patients.

References

  1. Moon DK: The flight from the subluxation. ACA J Chiropr. 1981, 18 (11): 22-3.

    Google Scholar 

  2. Bigos S, Bowyer O, Braen G, et al: Acute low back problems in adults. 1994, Clinical Practice Guideline No. 14. Rockville, MD: AHCPR Publication No. 95-0642

    Google Scholar 

  3. Bronfort G: Spinal manipulation: current state of research and its indications. Neurological Clinics of North America. 1999, 17 (1): 91-111.

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  4. Coulter ID, Hurwitz EL, Adams AH, Meeker WC, Hansen DT, Mootz RD, Aker PD, Genovese BJ, Shekelle PG: The appropriateness of manipulation and mobilization of the cervical spine. 1996, Santa Monica CA: RAND Corporation, [RAND MR-781-CCR]

    Google Scholar 

  5. Shekelle PG, Adams AH, Chassin MR, Hurwitz EL, Phillips RB, Brook RH: The appropriateness of spinal manipulation for low-back pain: project overview and literature review. 1991, Santa Monica, California: RAND Corporation, (Document #R-4025/1-CCR/FCER)

    Google Scholar 

  6. Chapman-Smith DA: The chiropractic profession: its education, practice, research and future directions. 2000, West Des Moines IA: NCMIC Group, Inc

    Google Scholar 

  7. Keating JC: Chiropractic: science and antiscience and pseudoscience, side by side. Skeptical Inquirer. 1997, 21 (4): 37-43.

    Google Scholar 

  8. Keating JC, Callender AK, Cleveland CS: A history of chiropractic education in North America: report to the Council on Chiropractic Education. 1998, Davenport IA: Association for the History of Chiropractic

    Google Scholar 

  9. Charlton KH: Approaches to the demonstration of vertebral subluxation: 1. introduction and manual diagnosis: a review. J Australian Chiropr Assoc. 1988, 18 (1): 9-13.

    Google Scholar 

  10. Keating JC: To hunt the subluxation: clinical research considerations. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1996, 19 (9): 613-9.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  11. Nelson CF: The subluxation question. J Chiropr Humanities. 1997, 7: 46-55.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  12. Wenban AB: Subluxation research: a survey of peer-reviewed chiropractic scientific journals. Chiropr J Australia. 2003, 33 (4): 122-30.

    Google Scholar 

  13. Gatterman MI, (ed): Foundations of chiropractic: subluxation. 1995, St. Louis: Mosby

    Google Scholar 

  14. Leach RA: The chiropractic theories: a textbook of scientific research. 2004, Philadelphia: Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins, Fourth

    Google Scholar 

  15. Masarsky C, Todres-Masarsky M: Somatovisceral aspects of chiropractic: an evidence-based approach. 2001, New York: Churchill Livingstone

    Google Scholar 

  16. Rosner AL: The role of subluxation in chiropractic. 1997, Arlington VA: Foundation for Chiropractic Education & Research

    Google Scholar 

  17. Association of Chiropractic Colleges: Position paper #1. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1996, 19 (9): 634-7.

    Google Scholar 

  18. Chiropractic Association of Australia, CoreValues. [http://www.chiropractors.asn.au/aboutcaa/caa/mission/mission.html]

  19. New Zealand Chiropractors' Association. 4 May 2004, [http://www.chiropractic.org.nz/chiropracticcare.html]

  20. McDonald WP, Durkin K, Iseman S, Pfefer M, Randall B, Smoke L, et al: How chiropractors think and practice: the survey of North American chiropractors. 2003, Ada OH: Institute for Social Research, Ohio North University

    Google Scholar 

  21. New study find unity in chiropractic: surprising agreement among DCs on issues of philosophy, practice. Dynamic Chiropractic. 21 (12): 1, 8, 10-2003 (June 2)

  22. Jensen GA, Mootz RD, Shekelle PG, Cherkin DC: Insurance coverage of chiropractic services. Chapter 6 in Chiropractic in the United States: training, practice and research. 1997, Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, AHCPR Publication No. 98-N002

    Google Scholar 

  23. Haldeman S: Neurologic effects of the adjustment. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2000, 23 (2): 112-4. 10.1016/S0161-4754(00)90078-2.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  24. Keating JC: Science and politics and the subluxation. Amer J Chiropr Med. 1988, 1 (3): 107-10.

    Google Scholar 

  25. Edwards J: The four biggest lies in chiropractic. [http://www.chiroweb.com/archives/17/25/05.html]

  26. Edwards J: Golfing with C.J. Dynamic Chiropractic. 22 (11): 34-2004b (May 20)

  27. Lynch RP: Passion: where has it gone?. J Amer Chiropr Assoc. 1995, 32 (11): 5-6.

    Google Scholar 

  28. Barge FH: Commitment to a paradigm: the solution to chiropractic's problems. The Chiropractic Choice. 2003, 2 (3): 3-4.

    Google Scholar 

  29. Wenban AB: Commentary: Subluxation-related research: is it time to call it a day?. Chiropr J Australia. 2003, 33 (4): 131-7.

    Google Scholar 

  30. Oakley PA, Harrison DE: Letter to the editor. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2004, 27 (1): 72-3. 10.1016/j.jmpt.2003.11.018.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  31. Owens EF: Chiropractic subluxation assessment: what the research tells us. J Can Chiropr Assoc. 2002, 46 (4): 215-20.

    PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  32. Phillips RB: Campus Connection. 2003, 2-

    Google Scholar 

  33. Nelson CF: Chiropractic scope of practice. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1993, 16 (7): 488-97.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  34. Grod J, Sikorski D, Keating JC: The unsubstantiated claims of the largest state, provincial and national chiropractic associations and research agencies. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 2001, 24 (8): 514-9. 10.1067/mmt.2001.118205.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  35. Keating JC, Hansen DT: Quackery vs. accountability in the marketing of chiropractic. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1992, 15 (7): 459-70.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  36. Sikorski DM, Grod JP: The unsubstantiated web site claims of chiropractic colleges in Canada and the United States. J Chiropr Education. 2003, 17 (2): 113-9.

    Google Scholar 

  37. Rome PL: Usage of chiropractic terminology in the literature: 296 ways to say "subluxation": complex issues of the vertebral subluxation. Chiropr Tech. 1996, 8 (2): 49-60.

    Google Scholar 

  38. Gatterman MI, Hansen DT: Development of chiropractic nomenclature through consensus. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1994, 17 (5): 302-9.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  39. Clum GW: Introduction II. The role of subluxation in chiropractic. Edited by: Rosner AL. 1997, Arlington VA: Foundation for Chiropractic Education & Research

    Google Scholar 

  40. Davenport HW: Pavlov's physiology factory: a physiologist as entrepreneur: an essay review. J Hist Med & Allied Sciences. 2004, 59 (2): 273-89. 10.1093/jhmas/59.2.273.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  41. Schiller F: Spinal irritation and osteopathy. Bull Hist Med. 1971, 45: 250-66.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  42. Starr P: The social transformation of American medicine. 1982, New York: Basic Books

    Google Scholar 

  43. Long PH: The naked chiropractor: insiders' guide to combating quackery and winning the war against pain. 2002, Tempe AZ: Evidence-Based Health Services, Inc.,

    Google Scholar 

  44. Sid E, Williams DC: quoted by the American Chiropractic Association. Statement to Associated Press, 1 April 1994

  45. Seaman D: Philosophy and science versus dogmatism in the practice of chiropractic. J Chiropr Humanities. 1998, 8: 55-66.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  46. Christensen MG, Kerkhoff D, Kollasch MW, Cohn L: Job analysis of chiropractic: A project report, survey analysis, and summary of the practice of chiropractic within the United States. 2000, Greeley CO: National Board of Chiropractic Examiners

    Google Scholar 

  47. Peet J: Enuresis (bedwetting): restoring normal function. Baby Talk: the Baby Adjuster's Newsletter. 2 (2): 1-4. 1993 (April 15)

  48. Parra AK, Bonci MA: Etiology, treatment and management of enuresis: a review. ACA J Chiropr. 1989, 26 (12): 25-8.

    Google Scholar 

  49. Wells BF: Enuresis and the spine. National College J Chiropr. 1939, 12 (3): 21-2.

    Google Scholar 

  50. Robuck SV: The interosseous lesion as a causative factor in enuresis and other bladder disturbances in children. J Amer Osteopathic Assoc. 1936, 36: 73-4.

    Google Scholar 

  51. Gemmell HA, Jacobson BH: Chiropractic management of enuresis: time-series descriptive design. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1989, 12 (5): 386-9.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  52. Fysh PN: Chiropractic management of enuresis. Dynamic Chiropractic. 12-3. July 30, 1993

  53. Borregard PE: Neurogenic bladder and spina bifida occulta: a case report. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1987, 10 (3): 122-3.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  54. McKellow BM: Enuresis and encopresis. New Zealand Med J. 1984, 26-8.

    Google Scholar 

  55. Leboeuf C, Brown P, Herman A, Leembruggen K, Walton D, Crisp TC: Chiropractic care of children with nocturnal enuresis: a prospective outcome study. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1991, 14 (2): 110-5.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  56. Reed WR, Beavers S, Reddy SK, Kern G: Chiropractic management of primary nocturnal enuresis. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1994, 17 (9): 596-600.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  57. Chiropractic BioPhysics. [http://www.idealspine.com]

  58. Directional Non-Force Technique. [http://www.nonforce.com]

  59. Gonstead Clinical Studies Society. [http://www.gonstead.com]

  60. Kale Clinics of Chiropractic. [http://www.kale.com]

  61. Advertisement for Nutri-West. Nutrition and the vertebral subluxation complex. Activator Update. 1998, 13 (5): 4-

  62. Carter R: Subluxation – the silent killer. J Can Chiropr Assoc. 2000, 44 (1): 9-18.

    PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  63. American Chiropractic Association, Inc. v. Tommy Thompson, Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. Plaintiff's reply memorandum of points and authorities in support of its cross-motion for summary judgment, in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, Case No. 98-2762. 16 April 2004

  64. Homola S: Bonesetting, chiropractic and cultism. 1963, Panama City FL: Critique Books

    Google Scholar 

  65. Morgan L: Letter to the editor. J Can Chiropr Assoc. 2000, 44 (3): 182-3.

    PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  66. Lawrence DJ: Sacred cows and shibboleths. J Chiropr Humanities. 1997, 7: 56-60.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  67. Good CJ: Traditional chiropractic philosophy: irrelevant or irreplaceable?. J Chiropr Humanities. 1996, 6: 50-4.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  68. Lawrence DJ: Introduction I. The role of subluxation in chiropractic. Edited by: Rosner AL. 1997, Arlington VA: Foundation for Chiropractic Education & Research

    Google Scholar 

  69. ICA under new management: reform candidates win. Dynamic Chiropractic. 21 (13): 1, 57-2003 (June 16)

  70. Gelardi TA: The science of identifying professions as applied to chiropractic. J Chiropr Humanities. 1996, 6: 11-7.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  71. Charlton KH: Data and dogma: the use and abuse of information. J Australian Chiropr Assoc. 1987, 17 (2): 46-8.

    Google Scholar 

  72. Keating JC: Letter to the editor. J Manip Physiol Ther. 1987, 10 (2): 80-1.

    CAS  Google Scholar 

  73. Keating JC: A survey of philosophical barriers to technique research in chiropractic. J Can Chiropr Assoc. 1989, 33 (4): 184-6.

    PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  74. Keating JC: Rationalism, empiricism and the philosophy of science in chiropractic. Chiropractic History. 1990, 10 (2): 23-30.

    CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  75. Keating JC: Toward a philosophy of the science of chiropractic: a primer for clinicians. 1992, Stockton CA: Stockton Foundation for Chiropractic Research

    Google Scholar 

  76. Keating JC: Scientific epistemology and the status of chiropractic: we are what we do. European J Chiropr. 1993, 41 (3): 81-8.

    Google Scholar 

  77. Marks D: The philosophy of science for chiropractic – simply stated. J Chiropr Humanities. 1994, 4: 56-60.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  78. Palmer BJ: Induction vs. deduction. 1915, Davenport IA: Palmer School of Chiropractic, (pamphlet)

    Google Scholar 

  79. Stephenson RW: Chiropractic textbook. 1927, Davenport IA: the author

    Google Scholar 

  80. Watkins CO: The basic principles of chiropractic government. Edited by: Sidney MT. 1944, (reprinted as Appendix A in Keating JC. Toward a philosophy of the science of chiropractic: a primer for clinicians. Stockton CA: Stockton Foundation for Chiropractic Research, 1992)

  81. Keating JC, Green BN, Johnson CD: "Research" and "science" in the first half of the chiropractic century. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1995, 18 (6): 357-78.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  82. Keating JC, Siordia L, Green BN: Henry G. Higley, pioneer chiropractic scientist. Chiropractic History. 2004, 24 (1): 35-60.

    Google Scholar 

  83. Keating JC, Caldwell S, Nguyen H, Saljooghi S, Smith B: A descriptive analysis of the Journal of Manipulative & Physiological Therapeutics, 1989–1996. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1998, 21 (8): 539-52.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  84. Keating JC, Young MA: Who is the chiropractic scientific community?. J Australian Chiropr Assoc. 1987, 17 (3): 84-6.

    Google Scholar 

  85. Keating JC, Mootz RD: The influence of political medicine on chiropractic dogma: implications for scientific development. J Manipulative Physiol Ther. 1989, 12 (5): 393-8.

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  86. Biggs L, Mierau D, Hay D: Measuring philosophy: a philosophy index. Journal of the Canadian Chiropractic Association. 2002, 46 (3): 173-84.

    PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  87. Keating JC: Philosophy and science in chiropractic: essential, inseparable and misunderstood. European J Chiropr. 2001, 46 (3): 51-60.

    Google Scholar 

  88. Clusserath MT: Predictability of the effects of nerve interference. J Chiropr Humanities. 1997, 7: 26-31.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  89. Charlton KH: Guest editorial: Silence is not golden: it's consent. Chiropr J Australia. 2003, 33 (3): 81-2.

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

None

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Joseph C Keating Jr.

Additional information

Authors' contributions

All authors contributed to the writing and re-writing of this paper.

Authors’ original submitted files for images

Below are the links to the authors’ original submitted files for images.

Authors’ original file for figure 1

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Keating, J.C., Charlton, K.H., Grod, J.P. et al. Subluxation: dogma or science? . Chiropr Man Therap 13, 17 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1186/1746-1340-13-17

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/1746-1340-13-17

Keywords