To the Editor,
May I humbly suggest that if Advance, which touts itself as "The Nation's Physical Therapy Newspaper," wishes to be taken seriously and to perform an educational service to physical therapists, that
it refrain in the future from publishing clinical claptrap such as the "Lighter Touch" article on craniosacral therapy by F.L. Burget in the September 13, 2002 issue. This article states as fact
(with nary a hint of reference to the scientific literature) that there exists a craniosacral rhythm. No such rhythm has ever been detected, except by those with "trained hands," for the simple
reason that no such rhythm exists. Simply making an assertion that a craniosacral rhythm exists, and that it can be detected and modulated by trained hands, does not make it so. Likewise, I can assert
that waving a triangular piece of metal over my patients will synergize their life energy forces and heal their illnesses. But my assertion does not make it so. Yet, following the lead of craniosacral
therapists, I can utilize the old device of referring to my detractors as being unable to "think outside the box", of being rigid in their thinking and unwilling to adopt new knowledge and findings
into clinical practice.
It will be unfortunate if uninitiated or unquestioning clinicians were to be influenced by this article to believe that there is a rational, scientific basis for this "therapy." There is not.
Craniosacral therapy does not even pass a common sense, face validity test. But don't take my word for it. I encourage your readers to search medline using "craniosacral therapy" as a
keyword. Read the literature, and you will learn that many published peer-reviewed research articles conclusively show that trained craniosacral therapists have unsurprisingly poor inter-reliability when
they independently assess the putative rhythm on the same subject. They fail because these raters are trying to rate something that is a figment of their imagination.
In the face of any evidence to support the notion of a craniosacral rhythm, it is time for physical therapists, and your magazine, to ignore craniosacral therapy in the hopes that it will fade away in a fashion
similar to phrenology.
Respectfully,
Steven Sawyer, PT, Ph.D. Associate Professor Physical Therapy Program Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center 3601 4th Street, Lubbock, TX 79430
RESPONSE TO ABOVE LETTER
October 25, 2002
To the Editor,
We applaud Advance magazine for putting the patients first and being open to presenting complementary methods of treatment to the healthcare professionals that the magazine serves. We were pleased to be asked to contribute to the growing library of articles Advance for Physical Therapists and PT Assistants has printed on the benefits of CranioSacral therapy. Two that stand out in our minds are the one in October, 1996, by John Murphy, about the Olympic diver who overcame vertigo using CranioSacral techniques and the other in February, 1998, that discusses Dr. Upledger's rationale for the therapy.
Dr. Sawyer states that CranioSacral rhythm is not a "fact". The fact is that John Upledger, DO, began researching craniosacral rhythm because of the rhythm he saw with his own eyes in the membranes surrounding
the spinal cord while assisting in a spinal operation. Dr. Upledger is a physician who has been named by Time magazine as one of the 100 innovators of the century. Many prominent medical doctors, such as
Andrew Weil, MD, (a Harvard Medical School graduate) have written and spoken about the benefits patients receive from CranioSacral therapy. The growing list of practitioners who both support and use
CranioSacral techniques in their practices include MD's, DO's, DC's, PT's, OT's, RN's, DDS's, and massage therapists, to name just a few. Currently, in the North Texas Hospital for Children at Medical City
Dallas, two conjoined twins under the care of Dr. Kenneth Salyer, founder of the World Craniofacial Foundation, are receiving CranioSacral therapy at the hands of a trained PT in order to enhance their survival
during separation surgery. This has been widely reported on the television news as well as in the print media (read the story at www.cbs11tv.com). We doubt that a man of Dr. Salyer's stature would engage in
claptrap to treat such a serious situation as the lives of these two babies.
Dr. Sawyer also stated that there were no references to scientific literature. There are many such references available. Milicien Tettambel, DO, coauthored an article in the Journal of the American
Osteopathic Association (vol. 78, October, 1978, p. 149) titled "Recording of the Cranial Rhythmic Impulse", in which she reported using force transducers taped across the frontal bone and the two mastoid processes
of the temporal bones on 30 subjects. She successfully recorded three separate rhythms on all the subjects. The cardiac pulses and respiratory rhythms were clearly recorded, as was a third pulse at an
average of 8 cycles per minute. She presumed the third rhythm to represent the cranial rhythmic impulse.
Jenkins, Campbell & White authored "Modulation Resembling Traube-Hering Waves Recorded in Human Brain" in European Neurology (Vol. 5:1-6, 1971), in which they reported that using ultrasound echo pulsations were
observed at 7 cycles per minute in a human subject. The pulsations did not change when the subject held his breath. Traube-Hering pulsations are usually measured on the ear. When they observed the
Traube-Hering pulsations, they differed significantly from the 7-per-minute pulsations of the brain. Therefore, they concluded that the 7-per-minute pulsations were autonomous and not related to either
cardiac, respiratory, and/or Traube-Hering pulsations. Also, Wallace, Avant, McKinney & Thurstone at Winston-Salem, NC, reported in the Journal of Neurology in 1975, in an article titled "Ultrasonic
Measurement of Intra-Cranial Pulsations at 9 Cycles Per Minute" that they had observed by ultrasound an apparently independent 9-cycle-per-minute intracranial pulsation in the brain and membrane tissues of a human
subject.
There is not room enough in one letter to list the pages of scientific and medical studies that have been published on the CranioSacral rhythm. We are sure if anyone chose to go to Dr. Upledger's website at
www.upledger.com, they would find many more articles and references on the subject.
Patients report lasting benefits from the therapy. Many people may discount the patient's experience as "anecdotal" evidence but to the individual patient they could care less what it is called when they have
gotten results. If this were simply an unfounded assertion, we doubt so many people from so many backgrounds would be using the methods in their practices.
Trained hands are necessary in any delicate physical interaction with the body (talk to anyone who has been touched by untrained or improperly trained hands). We would much prefer to have blood drawn by trained
hands rather than the nurse or technician fresh out of the classroom.
In the United States, doctors are taught there is one pulse. In Chinese, Ayurvedic, and Tibetan medicine they teach there are between 9 and 12 pulses or more, depending upon the discipline being taught.
Does that make the pulses felt by medicines that have been practiced for 5000 years non-existent because an American doctor practicing a discipline that is less than 200 years old cannot feel them? We don't
think so. We feel that anyone who will think outside the box of the American medical paradigm will also be able to feel the pulses. In CranioSacral therapy, clinicians are taught to use not only their
hands, but their whole body to palpate and find the rhythm within the individual patient.
We are sorry Dr. Sawyer does not feel comfortable presenting complementary therapies to his students during the college years when they should be questioning and expanding their education to find out what they
believe and what may work in their future practice. We have had the privilege of having the Director of the Occupational Therapy Program at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center send several of their
students to us for training.
Medline is a wonderful tool. However, it only deals with information that is recognized by the traditional US medical community. It does not consider either methods or conditions recognized in other
countries, but not yet "popular" in the United States. Just about any subject has articles to refute the information or theories about it. That conflicting information is what makes patients so uncertain
about the direction they should choose in healthcare. Even today, you can find many articles by narrow-minded individuals that deny osteopathic, chiropractic, and the oriental medicines and techniques that
have been practiced for thousands of years.
We are glad to see that in this time of increased world communication Advance magazine leads the way to understanding the work that has been done by others in other fields and other countries that impacts upon and
enhances the work of the therapists and clinicians here in the United States.
Respectfully,
Frankie L. Burget, OTR, RMT, CNDT Windsong Therapy and Wellness
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