Chiropractic Care During Pregnancy

babies,bellies,births,childbirths,expectant,expecting,females,Fotolia,healthcare,maternal,maternity,motherhood,mothers,parents,Photographs,pregnancies,pregnant,ultrasounds,unborn,womenRegular visits to the chiropractor help promote and maintain spinal health, including the nerves and bones. Chiropractors adjust and realign joints that are out of place due to accidents or uncomfortable lifestyles. One uncomfortable lifestyle that can benefit from chiropractic care is pregnancy.

What are the risks?

If you are pregnant and concerned about the risks of chiropractic care, then you can rest easy knowing that the risks are few. In fact, most chiropractors are trained to work with pregnant women. They are aware of special needs required of a pregnant woman’s body, and they know how to work with those needs.

Some chiropractors even have special tables for pregnant women that reduce unnecessary and uncomfortable pressure.

What are the benefits?

As you are surely aware, your body endures significant changes when you are pregnant. Of the changes that your body goes through, the following are a few that can lead to a joint or spinal injury: changes in your pelvis, changes to your posture, and a protruding abdomen coupled with a larger back curve.

Chiropractors working with pregnant women seek to create balance and alignment in the pelvis. If pelvic balance is off, the baby may have less space to grow in. This restricted space is known as intrauterine constraint. This also makes it hard for the baby to find the best position before delivery.

Chiropractic care can help a pregnant woman have a healthier pregnancy and less severe nausea symptoms. It can also decrease delivery and labor time, as well as pain in the neck, back, and related joints.

Another amazing benefit of chiropractic care during pregnancy is its ability to prevent a C-section.

What does chiropractic care have to do with breech deliveries?

The Webster Technique is a technique used by chiropractors to create a balance in the pelvis and relieve stress in the uterus and supporting ligaments of a pregnant woman. Larry Webster, the founder of the International Chiropractic Pediatric Association, created this technique to promote ideal positioning of the fetus.

The Webster Technique, when applied to babies in breech position, has proven to be successful 82% of the time. This significantly reduces all of the dangers that can come from having a breech delivery or relying on a caesarean section at the last minute. The ICPA recommends that chiropractors apply the Webster Technique to pregnant women no less than eight months pregnant.

The ICPA also recommends that all pregnant women should take advantage of chiropractic care to promote pelvic balance, regardless of the baby’s position in the womb. As we explained above, high pelvic balance allows the baby to move into a position more ideal for delivery.

What now?

If you are unsure about whether chiropractic care is right for you and your pregnancy, be sure to see your regular doctor, as well as a chiropractor that he or she recommends. If your doctor is unaware of the benefits of chiropractic care during pregnancy, ask her to find out more so she can advise you as best as possible.

Katie Robinson is a former nurse and health blog writer.  Katie turns to a Kissimmee, Florida chiropractor for regular spinal adjustments.  She was extremely pleased with the treatment her doctor provided while pregnant; Katie attributes the much shorter labor of her second son to the chiropractic care she received during her pregnancy.

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  • How Changing Visual Cues Can Affect Attitudes About Weight

    Pictures like these helped British researchers gauge people's attitudes about weight.

    Pictures like these helped British researchers gauge people's attitudes about weight.

    Courtesy of Martin Tovee i

    Pictures like these helped British researchers gauge people's attitudes about weight.

    Courtesy of Martin Tovee

    With most Americans fat or fatter, you'd think we'd be lightening up on the anti-fat attitudes.

    Alas, no. Even doctors often think their overweight patients are weak-willed.

    But changing negative attitudes about body size might be as simple as changing what you see. When women in England were shown photos of plus-sized women in neutral gray leotards, they became more tolerant.

    When the women were shown photos of anorexic women, attitudes became more positive there, too. "Showing them thin bodies makes them like thin bodies, more, and showing them fat bodies makes them like fat bodies more," says Lynda Boothroyd, a psychology researcher at Durham University in England, who led the study. She calls it a "visual diet," changing what your eyes eat.

    Why the unflattering leotards? Boothroyd and her colleagues wanted neutral clothing to sever the link between thinness and success that's so strong in Western cultures.

    The researchers also tested photos of women in designer clothes and found the test subjects thought better of the well-dressed women, fat or thin. The glamour effect existed independent of the change in perception caused by repeatedly seeing the leotard-clad women.

    All the study participants still preferred thinner-than-average bodies, but their preferences did move up or down depending on what they saw.

    Perhaps that's why we're so obsessed with thinness, even if most of the people around us are found to be larger. We're constantly fed images of very slim actresses and models, all beautifully dressed. "All you have to do is watch five minutes of TV and you see more thin bodies than you would all day on the street," Boothroyd says.

    There's no question that culture affects not just attitudes about weight, but body size itself. When Zulu women move from South Africa to England, their body size preference shifted from the full figures favored in Africa to a midway point between that and the thin ideal in the UK, Boothroyd says. Her work is published in the current issue of the online journal PLOS One.

    But that shift clearly hasn't happened in doctors. Another study in the same issue of PLOS One found that doctors are strongly biased against fat people, even if they don't think they are.

    This comes from a fascinating crowdsourced study, Project Implicit, which is designed to tease out attitudes that people are unwilling or unable to articulate. Led by psychologist Brian Nosek, an associate professor at the University of Virginia, the project offers dozens of free online tests that let you test your implicit biases â€" and contribute to science, too.

    Participants are shown photos of faces, and are tested on their speed to identify them and associate them with positive and negative words.

    More than 359,000 people took the project's "Weight Implicit Association Test" online, and about 2,300 said they were doctors. Even though physicians are constantly reminded about their need to work with patients to maintain a healthy weight, they had the same strong anti-fat bias as the public.

    "We don't know if this affects how doctors behave clinically," says Janice Sabin, an assistant professor in bioinformatics and medical education that the University of Washington in Seattle, who led the new study.

    But other studies have shown that many doctors view obese patients as unattractive and difficult to work with, and that obese women get inappropriate comments about their weight from their doctor.

    Given that, maybe it's time to show doctors some plus-sized photos â€" of hefty physicians.

    Chiropractic Care During Pregnancy

    babies,bellies,births,childbirths,expectant,expecting,females,Fotolia,healthcare,maternal,maternity,motherhood,mothers,parents,Photographs,pregnancies,pregnant,ultrasounds,unborn,womenRegular visits to the chiropractor help promote and maintain spinal health, including the nerves and bones. Chiropractors adjust and realign joints that are out of place due to accidents or uncomfortable lifestyles. One uncomfortable lifestyle that can benefit from chiropractic care is pregnancy.

    What are the risks?

    If you are pregnant and concerned about the risks of chiropractic care, then you can rest easy knowing that the risks are few. In fact, most chiropractors are trained to work with pregnant women. They are aware of special needs required of a pregnant woman’s body, and they know how to work with those needs.

    Some chiropractors even have special tables for pregnant women that reduce unnecessary and uncomfortable pressure.

    What are the benefits?

    As you are surely aware, your body endures significant changes when you are pregnant. Of the changes that your body goes through, the following are a few that can lead to a joint or spinal injury: changes in your pelvis, changes to your posture, and a protruding abdomen coupled with a larger back curve.

    Chiropractors working with pregnant women seek to create balance and alignment in the pelvis. If pelvic balance is off, the baby may have less space to grow in. This restricted space is known as intrauterine constraint. This also makes it hard for the baby to find the best position before delivery.

    Chiropractic care can help a pregnant woman have a healthier pregnancy and less severe nausea symptoms. It can also decrease delivery and labor time, as well as pain in the neck, back, and related joints.

    Another amazing benefit of chiropractic care during pregnancy is its ability to prevent a C-section.

    What does chiropractic care have to do with breech deliveries?

    The Webster Technique is a technique used by chiropractors to create a balance in the pelvis and relieve stress in the uterus and supporting ligaments of a pregnant woman. Larry Webster, the founder of the International Chiropractic Pediatric Association, created this technique to promote ideal positioning of the fetus.

    The Webster Technique, when applied to babies in breech position, has proven to be successful 82% of the time. This significantly reduces all of the dangers that can come from having a breech delivery or relying on a caesarean section at the last minute. The ICPA recommends that chiropractors apply the Webster Technique to pregnant women no less than eight months pregnant.

    The ICPA also recommends that all pregnant women should take advantage of chiropractic care to promote pelvic balance, regardless of the baby’s position in the womb. As we explained above, high pelvic balance allows the baby to move into a position more ideal for delivery.

    What now?

    If you are unsure about whether chiropractic care is right for you and your pregnancy, be sure to see your regular doctor, as well as a chiropractor that he or she recommends. If your doctor is unaware of the benefits of chiropractic care during pregnancy, ask her to find out more so she can advise you as best as possible.

    Katie Robinson is a former nurse and health blog writer.  Katie turns to a Kissimmee, Florida chiropractor for regular spinal adjustments.  She was extremely pleased with the treatment her doctor provided while pregnant; Katie attributes the much shorter labor of her second son to the chiropractic care she received during her pregnancy.

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  • Despite Anti-Fungal Treatment, More Woes For Some Meningitis Patients

    The news for patients who had injections of fungus-tainted steroids just keeps getting worse.

    Now doctors are reporting two new spinal conditions among patients successfully treated for meningitis, a brain infection. One involves epidural abscesses, pus-filled sacs of fluid around the spine. A more serious condition is arachnoiditis â€" inflammation of tissue around the nerve roots coming out of the spine.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention doesn't yet have a good handle on the number of these new complications, but there appear to be dozens so far.

    Most have been in Michiganand Tennessee, which together make up nearly half the 404 cases of fungal infections reported so far in 19 states. (Twenty-nine people have died.) But cases of spinal infections have recently been seen in Virginia and Indiana, too.

    "What we're hearing is that patients have been treated for meningitis and improved. Then they returned with these complications," Dr. Tom Chiller of CDC told Shots. "We don't have a good understanding of why certain people are developing these conditions."

    He says patients with these complications don't seem to be older or more immunocompromised, "so we're not able to predict who's going to develop this."

    The New York Times reports that about a third of 53 meningitis patients treated at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Ann Arbor, Mich., have developed epidural abscesses. Another 34 have had abscesses without prior meningitis.

    Chiller says the situation is "an unprecedented event," so doctors and public health experts are learning how to cope with it as they go along.

    The new problem affects different layers of tissue that encase the spine. The dura mater is the outermost layer. Next is the arachnoid, a delicate cobwebby membrane that carries much of the spinal cord's blood supply.

    Of the two complications, epidural (meaning on or around the dura) abscesses are less dangerous and more amenable to treatment. If anti-fungal medication doesn't do the job, neurosurgeons can often debride or remove the infected tissue and drain the infection.

    Arachnoiditis is much more difficult to treat. Delicate nerve roots are caught in a thick, fibrous material that compresses them, causing intense pain, numbness, paralysis, pins-and-needles sensations, sometimes loss of bladder control and other neurologic symptoms.

    Surgery is not usually an option, if ever, and the success of drug therapy is uncertain. Chiller says experts don't think it's a good idea to infuse anti-fungal drugs directly into the spine because they can increase inflammation and make matters worse.

    Patients who develop these spinal complications may need to be on anti-fungal medication, often intravenously, for six months to a year, Chiller says.

    The trickiest problem for doctors is diagnosing epidural abscesses or arachnoiditis, because many of the patients exposed to the mold-contaminated steroids already have chronic back pain.

    "That's why they were getting injections, right?" Chiller says. "So the real challenge is identifying whether the pain over the site of injection or where they have chronic pain is worse ... or is different."

    There's no telling how many patients will develop the spinal complications. One indication is that so far most of the known victims previously had meningitis.

    That appears to limit the risk largely to the 400 or so reported meningitis cases â€" and the others expected to be discovered in the coming weeks.

    "We think the last of these products were given around Oct. 1, so we're already a month out from that," Chiller says. "We've passed the peak of the mean incubation period â€" the period between injection and onset of symptoms â€" which is around 20 days."

    Other meningitis cases will be reported, he says, but they should begin to taper off quickly this month.

    An estimated 14,000 Americans received injections of the mold-contaminated steroid made by New EnglandCompoundingCenter, a Massachusettscompany that has been shut down. Federal inspectors have found fungal and bacteria contamination in many samples of drugs made by theMassachusetts company.

    A federal criminal investigation is under way, and a number of civil suits have already been filed.

    Chiropractic Care During Pregnancy

    babies,bellies,births,childbirths,expectant,expecting,females,Fotolia,healthcare,maternal,maternity,motherhood,mothers,parents,Photographs,pregnancies,pregnant,ultrasounds,unborn,womenRegular visits to the chiropractor help promote and maintain spinal health, including the nerves and bones. Chiropractors adjust and realign joints that are out of place due to accidents or uncomfortable lifestyles. One uncomfortable lifestyle that can benefit from chiropractic care is pregnancy.

    What are the risks?

    If you are pregnant and concerned about the risks of chiropractic care, then you can rest easy knowing that the risks are few. In fact, most chiropractors are trained to work with pregnant women. They are aware of special needs required of a pregnant woman’s body, and they know how to work with those needs.

    Some chiropractors even have special tables for pregnant women that reduce unnecessary and uncomfortable pressure.

    What are the benefits?

    As you are surely aware, your body endures significant changes when you are pregnant. Of the changes that your body goes through, the following are a few that can lead to a joint or spinal injury: changes in your pelvis, changes to your posture, and a protruding abdomen coupled with a larger back curve.

    Chiropractors working with pregnant women seek to create balance and alignment in the pelvis. If pelvic balance is off, the baby may have less space to grow in. This restricted space is known as intrauterine constraint. This also makes it hard for the baby to find the best position before delivery.

    Chiropractic care can help a pregnant woman have a healthier pregnancy and less severe nausea symptoms. It can also decrease delivery and labor time, as well as pain in the neck, back, and related joints.

    Another amazing benefit of chiropractic care during pregnancy is its ability to prevent a C-section.

    What does chiropractic care have to do with breech deliveries?

    The Webster Technique is a technique used by chiropractors to create a balance in the pelvis and relieve stress in the uterus and supporting ligaments of a pregnant woman. Larry Webster, the founder of the International Chiropractic Pediatric Association, created this technique to promote ideal positioning of the fetus.

    The Webster Technique, when applied to babies in breech position, has proven to be successful 82% of the time. This significantly reduces all of the dangers that can come from having a breech delivery or relying on a caesarean section at the last minute. The ICPA recommends that chiropractors apply the Webster Technique to pregnant women no less than eight months pregnant.

    The ICPA also recommends that all pregnant women should take advantage of chiropractic care to promote pelvic balance, regardless of the baby’s position in the womb. As we explained above, high pelvic balance allows the baby to move into a position more ideal for delivery.

    What now?

    If you are unsure about whether chiropractic care is right for you and your pregnancy, be sure to see your regular doctor, as well as a chiropractor that he or she recommends. If your doctor is unaware of the benefits of chiropractic care during pregnancy, ask her to find out more so she can advise you as best as possible.

    Katie Robinson is a former nurse and health blog writer.  Katie turns to a Kissimmee, Florida chiropractor for regular spinal adjustments.  She was extremely pleased with the treatment her doctor provided while pregnant; Katie attributes the much shorter labor of her second son to the chiropractic care she received during her pregnancy.

    Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...

    Related posts:

  • Treatment of Herpes Zoster during Pregnancy
  • Know the Warning signs of Tubal Pregnancy
  • Diagnosis of Pregnancy
  • Purchase A Suitable Health Insurance Policy And Cover Your Pregnancy
  • Importance of Nutrition Before Pregnancy
  • Herpes Zoster during Pregnancy
  • How Early Can You Take a Pregnancy Test?
  • What Problems May Arise During Pregnancy?
  • How to Treat Hemorrhoids During Pregnancy?
  • Baby Grows: Fetus Size During First Semester of Pregnancy
  • Despite Anti-Fungal Treatment, More Woes For Some Meningitis Patients

    The news for patients who had injections of fungus-tainted steroids just keeps getting worse.

    Now doctors are reporting two new spinal conditions among patients successfully treated for meningitis, a brain infection. One involves epidural abscesses, pus-filled sacs of fluid around the spine. A more serious condition is arachnoiditis â€" inflammation of tissue around the nerve roots coming out of the spine.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention doesn't yet have a good handle on the number of these new complications, but there appear to be dozens so far.

    Most have been in Michiganand Tennessee, which together make up nearly half the 404 cases of fungal infections reported so far in 19 states. (Twenty-nine people have died.) But cases of spinal infections have recently been seen in Virginia and Indiana, too.

    "What we're hearing is that patients have been treated for meningitis and improved. Then they returned with these complications," Dr. Tom Chiller of CDC told Shots. "We don't have a good understanding of why certain people are developing these conditions."

    He says patients with these complications don't seem to be older or more immunocompromised, "so we're not able to predict who's going to develop this."

    The New York Times reports that about a third of 53 meningitis patients treated at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Ann Arbor, Mich., have developed epidural abscesses. Another 34 have had abscesses without prior meningitis.

    Chiller says the situation is "an unprecedented event," so doctors and public health experts are learning how to cope with it as they go along.

    The new problem affects different layers of tissue that encase the spine. The dura mater is the outermost layer. Next is the arachnoid, a delicate cobwebby membrane that carries much of the spinal cord's blood supply.

    Of the two complications, epidural (meaning on or around the dura) abscesses are less dangerous and more amenable to treatment. If anti-fungal medication doesn't do the job, neurosurgeons can often debride or remove the infected tissue and drain the infection.

    Arachnoiditis is much more difficult to treat. Delicate nerve roots are caught in a thick, fibrous material that compresses them, causing intense pain, numbness, paralysis, pins-and-needles sensations, sometimes loss of bladder control and other neurologic symptoms.

    Surgery is not usually an option, if ever, and the success of drug therapy is uncertain. Chiller says experts don't think it's a good idea to infuse anti-fungal drugs directly into the spine because they can increase inflammation and make matters worse.

    Patients who develop these spinal complications may need to be on anti-fungal medication, often intravenously, for six months to a year, Chiller says.

    The trickiest problem for doctors is diagnosing epidural abscesses or arachnoiditis, because many of the patients exposed to the mold-contaminated steroids already have chronic back pain.

    "That's why they were getting injections, right?" Chiller says. "So the real challenge is identifying whether the pain over the site of injection or where they have chronic pain is worse ... or is different."

    There's no telling how many patients will develop the spinal complications. One indication is that so far most of the known victims previously had meningitis.

    That appears to limit the risk largely to the 400 or so reported meningitis cases â€" and the others expected to be discovered in the coming weeks.

    "We think the last of these products were given around Oct. 1, so we're already a month out from that," Chiller says. "We've passed the peak of the mean incubation period â€" the period between injection and onset of symptoms â€" which is around 20 days."

    Other meningitis cases will be reported, he says, but they should begin to taper off quickly this month.

    An estimated 14,000 Americans received injections of the mold-contaminated steroid made by New EnglandCompoundingCenter, a Massachusettscompany that has been shut down. Federal inspectors have found fungal and bacteria contamination in many samples of drugs made by theMassachusetts company.

    A federal criminal investigation is under way, and a number of civil suits have already been filed.

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