Title: Clinical Problem Solving Strategies
1Clinical Problem Solving Strategies
2Placebo effects
- Placebo is Latin for I will please
- Refers to any type of treatment that is inert
- Used in research trials to objectively test the
efficacy of new treatments - One group is given the treatment, while another
group (the control group) receives a placebo - Comparing the results from both groups should
reveal the effects of the treatment
3Intervention
4Placebo American Heritage Dictionary
- A substance containing no medication and
prescribed or given to reinforce a patient's
expectation to get well - An inactive substance or preparation used as a
control in an experiment or test to determine the
effectiveness of a medicinal drug - Something of no intrinsic remedial value that is
used to appease or reassure another
5Placebo effects cont.
- Interestingly, some people get better in the
placebo group - This phenomenon is known as the placebo effect
- The placebo effect is substantial
- About one third of people taking placebos for a
number of complaints will experience relief - The underlying mechanisms remain a mystery
6Sham
- The term sham treatment is often used instead
of placebo - Definition
- Something false or empty that is purported to be
genuine a spurious imitation
7Placebo effects cont.
- The placebo effect is triggered by the patient's
belief in the treatment and their expectation of
feeling better - If symptoms are relieved by taking an inert
substance or undergoing a dummy procedure, was
the original illness imaginary? - No
8Factors that influence the placebo effect
- Characteristics of the placebo
- If the pill (or treatment) looks genuine, the
person taking it is more likely to believe that
it contains active ingredients - Larger sized pills suggest a stronger dose than
smaller pills, and taking two pills appears more
potent than just one - Injections have a more powerful effect than pills
9Factors that influence cont.
- Attitude of the patient
- If the person expects the treatment to work, the
chances of a placebo effect are higher - However, the placebo effect may still take place
even if the person is skeptical of success - The power of suggestion is probably at work here
10Factors that influence cont.
- Doctor-patient relationship
- If the person trusts their health care
practitioner, they are more likely to believe
that the placebo will work - Chiropractors typically instill more trust in
their patients, consequently critics have pointed
to this as a likely explanation of our successes
11Placebo effects cont.
- Types of placebos
- Pills are well-known for their placebo effect
- However, a placebo can be any inert or dummy
treatment - Special diets, exercise, physical therapy or
surgery - Even chiropractic manipulation
12Psychic surgery - Is actually produced by
sleight of hand. Animal tissue and blood are
used to give a realistic appearance, while a
patient's fleshy midriff helps create the
illusion that the surgeon's fingers have
actually penetrated the body. Still practiced
today in Brazil and the Philippines.
13How placebos work
- Self-limiting disorders
- Many conditions are self-limiting (e.g., common
cold, some back or neck pain) - They will resolve on their own with or without
treatment - Symptoms resolving is merely coincidence
14How placebos work cont.
- Remission
- The symptoms of some disorders, such as multiple
sclerosis and lupus, may wax and wane - A remission during a course of placebos may be
coincidence, and not due to the placebos at all
15How placebos work cont.
- Changes in behavior
- The placebo may increase a persons motivation to
take better care of themselves, which may be
responsible for the easing of their symptoms - Altered perception
- The persons interpretation of their symptoms may
change with the expectation of feeling better.
(e.g., a sharp pain being reinterpreted as an
uncomfortable tingling)
16How placebos work cont.
- Reduced anxiety
- Taking the placebo and expecting to feel better
may soothe the autonomic nervous system reducing
levels of stress chemicals - Brain chemicals
- Placebos may trigger the brain to release
endorphins, the body's own natural painkillers
17How placebos work cont.
- Altered brain state
- Research has shown that the brain responds to an
imagined scene in much the same way it responds
to an actual visualized scene. Placebos may help
the brain to remember a time before the onset of
symptoms, and then bring about physiological
change - The so-called remembered wellness theory
18Placebo examples
- A meta-analysis of studies of depressed
individuals taking antidepressant medications
suggests that approximately - One quarter of the drug response is due to the
administration of an active medication - One half is a placebo effect
- The remaining quarter is due to other nonspecific
factors
Listening to Prozac but Hearing Placebo A
Meta-Analysis of Antidepressant Medication.
Prevention Treatment, Volume 1, Article 0002a,
June 26, 1998
19Placebo examples cont.
- In a survey of surgery for lumbar disc disease,
although no disc herniation was present in 346
patients (negative surgical exploration),
complete relief of sciatica occurred in 37
percent and from back pain in 43 percent
20Placebo examples cont.
- Moseley et al did a double-blinded, randomized,
placebo-controlled trial to compare arthroscopic
lavage and debridement vs. a sham procedure - They found that all three treatment groups fared
equally subjective symptomatic relief was
reported, but no objective improvement in
function in any of the groups
21Placebo examples cont.
- Forty years ago, a young Seattle cardiologist
named Leonard Cobb conducted a unique trial of a
procedure then commonly used for angina, in which
doctors made small incisions in the chest and
tied knots in two arteries to try to increase
blood flow to the heart. It was a popular
technique and 90 percent of patients reported
that it helped, but when Cobb compared it with
placebo surgery in which he made incisions but
did not tie off the arteries, the sham operations
proved just as successful. The procedure, known
as internal mammary ligation, was soon abandoned - "The Placebo Prescription" by Margaret Talbot,
New York Times Magazine, January 9, 2000
22Sham v. Pill
- Kaptchuk et al. Sham device v inert pill
randomised controlled trial of two placebo
treatments. BMJ 2006332391-397. - Fake acupuncture and sugar pills were tested for
their effect on relieving arm pain - Both groups noticed improvements, but fake
acupuncture was significantly better - 25 of acupuncture group noticed side effects and
3 of the sugar pill group actually withdrew
because of them
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24Placebo Death?
25Natural history of a disease vs. placebo effect
- The body has a natural ability to heal itself and
people heal spontaneously, occasionally even when
the illnesses is serious - Hard to differentiate from placebo effect
- Cases of spontaneous remission sometimes end up
being regarded as miracles
26Why is this important?
- Placebo effects, disease natural history, and
regression to the mean can result in high rates
of good outcomes, which may be falsely ascribed
to specific treatment effects - The true causes of improvements in pain after
treatment remain unknown in the absence of
independently evaluated randomized controlled
trials
27Chiropractic care for asthma
- A Comparison of Active and Simulated Chiropractic
Manipulation as Adjunctive Treatment for
Childhood Asthma - Balon, M.D., et al
- Aker, D.C., Rowther, D.C.
- The New England Journal of Medicine
- October 8, 1998
- Volume 339, Number 15
28Why this study was done
- There have been reports that chiropractic spinal
manipulation is beneficial for non-musculoskeletal
conditions, including asthma (by DCs and DOs) - 45 percent of families with a family member with
asthma had consulted a practitioner of
alternative medicine, most often a chiropractor,
for management of the disease (in Brisbane,
Australia)
29Why this study was done cont.
- Chiropractic theory states that the correction
of subluxation by manipulation, with restoration
of normal mechanical and nerve function, should
improve airway function and aid in the resolution
of asthma. - Dhami MSI, DeBoer KF. Systemic effects of spinal
lesions. In Haldeman S, ed. Principles and
practice of chiropractic. 2nd ed. Norwalk,
Conn.Appleton Lange, 1992115-35.
30Why this study was done cont.
- The long-term use of b-agonists and inhaled
corticosteroids, is controversial because of
adverse effects - Consequently an alternative approach that reduces
the need for medication would be valuable
31What was done
- We assessed objective and subjective outcomes in
children with asthma who were treated with active
or simulated chiropractic manipulation in a
randomized, controlled trial.
32Methods
- Subjects
- inclusion criteria
- Children 7 to 16 years of age with asthma
(diagnosed by a physician) for more than one year
- Had symptoms requiring the use of a
bronchodilator at least three times weekly - Recruited through advertising
33Subjects cont.
- Responsiveness to bronchodilators was required to
confirm the presence of asthma - Defined as
- A rise in the forced expiratory volume (FEV)
after the use of an inhaled bronchodilator - Or airway hyperresponsiveness to methacholine (a
decrease of FEV after administration)
34Subjects cont.
- There had to be evidence of vertebral subluxation
on palpation, as determined by a single
chiropractor on screening - Excluded if they had other lung diseases,
contraindications to spinal manipulation,
previously received chiropractic care, had
unstable asthma, or if they were noncompliant
with their prescribed medical regimen (exclusion
criteria)
35Assessments
- Baseline
- Questionnaires covering respiratory and
musculoskeletal history (qualitative methods) - Spirometry before and after the inhalation of 200
µg of salbutamol (quantitative) - Subjects were instructed to use a flowmeter at
home, and to complete a study-specific symptom
diary
36Assessments cont.
- Subjects kept track of episodes of nocturnal
wheezing and cough, daytime wheezing, cough,
chest tightness or breathlessness, production of
sputum, and episodes of limitation of activity - After one week, another methacholine challenge
was performed - And the Pediatric Asthma Quality of Life
Questionnaire was administered
37Assessments cont.
- After another two-week period of evaluation,
eligibility was confirmed by a pulmonologist - Then the subjects were randomly assigned to
active or simulated treatment
38Blinding
- Except for the treating chiropractor and one
investigator, all the participants were blinded
to treatment assignment throughout the study - There were 11 experienced chiropractors
participating
39Visit frequency
- Subjects visited the chiropractor three times
weekly for four weeks, twice weekly for four
weeks, then weekly for eight weeks - 20 to 36 visits
40Intervention
- Active chiropractic treatment consisted of
manipulation with the subject prone, lying on one
side, and supine, in conjunction with the
administration of gentle soft-tissue therapy - Vertebral segments were treated as determined by
the treating chiropractor - All chiropractors used diversified technique
41Simulated treatment
- Soft-tissue massage and gentle palpation were
applied to the spine, paraspinal muscles, and
shoulders - A distraction maneuver was performed by turning
the subjects head from one side to the other
while alternately palpating the ankles and feet
42Simulated treatment cont.
- A nondirectional push (impulse) was applied to
the gluteal region with the subject positioned on
each side - In the prone position, a similar impulse was
applied bilaterally to the scapulae
43Simulated treatment cont.
- The subject was then placed supine, with the head
rotated slightly to each side, and an impulse
applied to the external occipital protuberance - Low-amplitude, low-velocity impulses were applied
in all these nontherapeutic contacts, with
adequate joint slack so that no joint opening or
cavitation occurred
44Comparison
- The comparison of treatments was between
- Active spinal manipulation as routinely performed
by chiropractors - And hands-on procedures without adjustments or
manipulation - All medical treatment the subjects were receiving
before the study was maintained during the study
45Comparable groups?
- Subjects were asked 12 questions at the end of
the study, regarding the attention the subjects
received from the chiropractor, the explanations
of procedures, communication, feeling at ease,
the skill and ability of the chiropractor, and
overall quality of care
46Outcomes
- The primary outcome was the change from base line
in the morning peak expiratory flow measured
before the use of a bronchodilator at two and
four months - Secondary outcomes were the changes in airway
responsiveness, FEV 1, symptoms of asthma, the
need for inhaled b-agonists, the use of oral
corticosteroids, quality of life, and overall
satisfaction with treatment
47Results
- All subjects were accounted for
- 199 were assessed
- 108 were ineligible and reasons were given
- 91 were eligible and were randomly assigned
- 45 to active treatment (6 dropped out)
- 46 to simulated treatment (4 dropped out)
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49Results cont.
- There were small increases (7 to 12 liters per
minute) in morning and evening peak expiratory
flow in both treatment groups - With no significant differences in the change
from base-line values between the groups - See Fig. 1
50Figure 1
- Differences in Percent Change in the Mean Morning
Peak Expiratory Flow from Base Line to Two Months
and Four Months. - Values shown are the changes in the
active-treatment group minus those in the
simulated-treatment group. The I bars indicate
means and 95 percent confidence intervals.
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52Results cont.
- Symptoms and use of b-agonists declined in both
groups, but no significant difference between the
groups - Increases in quality of life were greater than
the minimally important differences in both
groups at two and four months, but no significant
differences between the groups overall
53Results cont.
- There were no significant changes in spirometric
measurements or airway responsiveness
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55Results cont.
- Mean satisfaction scores were similar 6.22 for
the active-treatment group and 6.46 for the
simulated treatment group (maximal score, 7.0) - The majority of the subjects (63 percent) were
uncertain whether they had received active or
simulated treatment - No adverse events occurred during the study
56Discussion
- There was a substantial improvement in symptoms
and quality of life and a reduction in b-agonist
use - However, these changes did not differ
significantly between the active-treatment and
simulated-treatment groups - There were no significant changes in objective
measurements of airway function
57Discussion cont.
- Hence, the addition of chiropractic spinal
manipulation to usual medical care for four
months had no effect on the control of childhood
asthma
58Discussion cont.
- The authors were critical of previous trials that
showed evidence of benefit of chiropractic
treatment of asthma because they were
methodologically deficient - They were not matched for age or respiratory
status - Or there was no control group
59Discussion cont.
- The possibility of spontaneous or placebo-driven
improvement in chronic illness dictates that
studies of the efficacy of treatment regimens be
adequately controlled, randomized, and blinded - Although it was impossible for the treating
chiropractors and the investigator undertaking
treatment checks to remain unaware of the
treatment assignments
60Discussion cont.
- The successes of previous trials were denigrated
because airway responsiveness did not change
along with subjective symptoms - This suggests that the effect was more likely to
have been a placebo effect or study effect
(Hawthorne effect)
61Conclusions
- In children with mild or moderate asthma, the
addition of chiropractic spinal manipulation to
usual medical care provided no benefit
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63Critique
- Are there any methodological flaws?
- What conclusions can we draw from the study?
- What conclusions cant we draw from the study?
- Why do you think its necessary to know how to
critique these articles?
64Anthony Rosner,PhD
- . . . the same authors had already concluded 17
months earlier that with nighttime symptoms there
was a significant difference between the same two
patient groups at the highly robust null
probability level of plt0.001. This discrepancy
was not mentioned by the authors in their NEJM
paper. - A randomized controlled trial of chiropractic
spinal manipulation in children with chronic
asthma. American Thoracic Society Convention, San
Francisco, CA, May 21, 1997.
65Sham chiropractic
- Placebo or sham chiropractic manipulations are
either - So invasive that they introduce possibly
therapeutic forces into the tissues or - So dissimilar from chiropractic manipulation that
blinding is not possible - Patients may not receive a placebo effect
66Eric L. Hurwitz, et al. Frequency and Clinical
Predictors of Adverse Reactions to Chiropractic
Care in the UCLA Neck Pain Study
Given the possible higher risk of adverse
reactions and lack of demonstrated effectiveness
of manipulation over mobilization, chiropractors
should consider a conservative approach for
applying manipulation to their patients,
especially those with severe neck pain.
67Is Chiropractic Evidence Based?
- Adrian B. Wenban, BAppSc, MMedSc
- Private Practice
- JMPT 2003261E-9E.
68Introduction
- Editorials in a number of major medical journals
have considered chiropractic to be part of
complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) - They also contend that CAMs, and therefore
chiropractic, by definition, are not evidence
based
69Introduction cont.
- On the other hand, a recently published review
article concluded that there was an increase in
the number of CAM clinical trials published in
mainstream medical journals over the last 30
years - Indicates an increasing level of original CAM
research activity (and chiropractic) and a trend
toward an evidence-based approach
70Quotes suggesting that CAM is not evidence based
- Applying evidence-based medicine to CM, which
includes such therapies as acupuncture,
chiropractic, hypnosis and herbal medicines,
seems contradictory. CM is often defined as
techniques for which no evidence of benefit
exists - What most sets alternative medicine apart..., is
that it has not been scientifically tested
71Quotes cont.
- One might still ask why so many people pay for
unproved CM when they can have scientifically
backed medicine at no extra expense - Most alternative medicine has not been tested
scientifically
72Quotes cont.
- Opponents of alternative medicine argue that the
field is filled with crackpots who deceive and
defraud patients and wreak havoc by resorting to
unscientific treatments - Most unconventional therapies are not evidence
based - The efficacy and safety of CM are grossly under
researched
73Introduction cont.
- The author of this current article pointed out
that the extent to which the day-to-day care
delivered in chiropractic practice is based on
evidence has not been quantified
74Study Objectives
- To determine
- The proportion of care delivered in a
chiropractic practice that is based on evidence
from good-quality RCTs - Whether chiropractic practice can be evaluated
with methods as rigorous as those used to
evaluate medical specialties - How the proportion of care delivered, and
supported by good-quality RCTs, compares between
chiropractic and medicine
75Methods
- A retrospective survey of patient files from a
single chiropractic office was carried out - The author reviewed the case notes of 180
consecutive patients seen over the course of 5
working days - The chiropractor had 6 years of clinical
experience and only a very basic understanding of
evidence-based practice
76Methods cont.
- The chiropractor was not aware that her case
notes would be reviewed at the time they were
recorded - She was blinded to the intent of the study, thus
removing practitioner bias - The chief complaints and the primary
interventions were decided through discussions
between the author and chiropractor
77Methods cont.
- Literature searches were carried out to determine
the extent of evidence supporting the primary
interventions associated with the chief
complaints - The goal was to locate at least 1 relevant RCT
published in a peer-reviewed journal that
supported the care delivered - RCTs were critically appraised and rated
78Results
- 5 of the 19 supportive RCTs were not of good
methodologic quality and were not included in the
evidence base - 68.3 of patients received primary interventions
for chief complaints that were supported by
good-quality clinical trials - 31.7 were deemed to be based on poor-quality or
no RCT evidence
79Comparison of interventions from different
disciplines
Interventions supported byDiscipline
clinical trials () Pediatric general
surgery 11 Inpatient general surgery 24
General practice 31 38 Inpatient
general medicine 53 Acute general psychiatry
65 Chiropractic practice 68.3
Pediatric practice 39.9 Internal
medicine 64.8
80Discussion
- This study was based on a very simplified model
of clinical practice - In reality, clinical practice is more complex
with patients presenting with more than 1
complaint - Also, chiropractors often use more than 1
intervention with the same patient
81Discussion cont.
- These results were limited to patients under the
care of 1 chiropractor - Generalization of these findings to other
chiropractic practices must await confirmatory
findings from larger similar surveys
82Discussion cont.
- Since the literature review for this study was
performed, several RCTs have been published
supporting interventions that formed part of this
study and may result in a greater proportion of
chiropractic practice being deemed evidence based
83Conclusion
- The results, suggest that chiropractic practice
can readily be examined with methodologies as
rigorous as those used to evaluate specialties of
medicine - And that 68.3 of the care delivered to patients
presenting to a chiropractic practice was
supported by evidence from good-quality,
randomized clinical trials
84Conclusion
- This proportion compares favorably to a number of
specialties of medicine
85SA, spinal adjustment EX, exercise ED, education
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