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Chiropractic care of a patient with vertebral subluxation and Bell’s Palsy. 

 

Alcantara J, Plaugher G, Van Wyngarden DL.  J Manipulative Physiol Ther.  2003;25:e14

 

 

Abstract

 

Objective:         To describe the chiropractic care of a patient medically diagnosed with Bell’s palsy and discuss issues clinically relevant to this disorder, such as its epidemiology, etiology, diagnosis, care, and prognosis.

 

Clinical Features:         A 49-year=old woman with a medical diagnosis of Bell’s palsy sought chiropractic care for this disorder.  Her symptoms included right facial paralysis, extreme phonophobia, pain in the right temporomandibular joint (TMJ), and neck pain.  Signs of cervical vertebral and TMJ subluxations included edema, tenderness, asymmetry of motion and posture, and malalignment detected from plain film radiographs.

 

Intervention and Outcome:     The patient was cared for with full spine contact-specific, high velocity, low-amplitude adjustments (Gonstead Technique) to sites of vertebral and occipital subluxations.  The patient’s left TMJ was also adjusted.  The initial symptomatic response to care was positive, and the patient made continued improvements during the 6 months of care.

 

Conclusion:       There are indications that patients suffering from Bell palsy may benefit from a holistic chiropractic approach that not only includes a focus of examination and care of the primary regional areas of complaint (eg, face, TMJ) but also potentially from significant vertebral subluxation concomitants.