Clinical Review

Man, 57, With Dyspnea After Chiropractic Manipulation

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Shortly after beginning chiropractic manipulations under anesthesia for treatment of ankylosing spondylitis, a man presents to the emergency department with several fractured vertebrae and a large hemothorax.


 

A 57-year-old man presented to the emergency department (ED) with a two-day history of worsening shortness of breath, light-headedness, and back pain. The patient, who had a history of ankylosing spondylitis, had been receiving weekly therapy from a chiropractor for about 10 years. One week before presenting to the ED, he had begun to undergo daily manipulations under anesthesia (MUA)—an aggressive chiropractic procedure that is administered while the patient is under monitored, procedural sedation. After the second day of treatment, the patient began to experience worsening back pain and progressive light-headedness and shortness of breath.

At a follow-up visit with his chiropractor, he was found to have decreased O2 saturation and was directed to go to the hospital for evaluation. On arrival at the ED, the patient was awake and alert. He had intact motor strength in all extremities, no sensory abnormalities, intact symmetric reflexes, and no bladder or bowel dysfunction, with a negative Babinski sign. His O2 saturation was 92% on 5 L of oxygen. An absence of breath sounds was noted on the left side.

Chest x-ray (see Figure 1) was performed, which demonstrated complete opacification of the left hemithorax, consistent with a large pleural effusion or hemothorax. CT scan of the thoracic spine showed diffuse ankylosis. A complex oblique coronal and transversely oriented fracture with 7 mm of displacement was identified, beginning at the right anterior inferior lateral margin of the T8 vertebral body and extending centrally and inferiorly to the left and right into the T9 vertebral body. The fracture continued through the right T9-10 neural foramen and what was probably the right fused T9-10 facet joint. The fracture exited through the left superior and lateral margin of the T10 vertebral body and the left T10-11 neural foramen (see Figures 2, 3, and 4).

A chest tube was inserted in the ED, and 1,600 mL of old blood was immediately drained. The patient was admitted to the ICU on the trauma service. He was taken to surgery for open reduction and internal fixation of his unstable thoracic spine fracture on day 3 of hospitalization, after his pulmonary condition stabilized. Pedicle screws were placed from T7 through T12 during the spinal fusion. Good reduction of the fracture was observed following the spine surgery (see Figures 5 and 6). At the conclusion of surgery, an epidural catheter was placed in the thoracic spine to administer pain control.

After the spine portion of the procedure, the patient was repositioned and underwent video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery of the left hemithorax for evacuation of retained hemothorax. The patient tolerated the procedure well and was taken to the ICU for recovery.

On postoperative day 2, the patient complained of chest pain and experienced hypoxemia with activity. CT angiography of the chest demonstrated bilateral segmental and subsegmental pulmonary emboli. The epidural catheter was discontinued. Six hours later, a heparin drip was started, and the patient was transitioned to therapeutic enoxaparin and warfarin. When methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) was detected in his hemothorax fluid, he was treated with a course of nafcillin.

The patient was discharged to home on postoperative day 12. He has remained neurologically intact and has returned to his former work activities. He is not taking narcotic pain medications.

Discussion
Chiropractic care is a popular alternative health care modality in the United States. Researchers for the 2007 National Health Interview Study1 reported an annual use of chiropractic manipulation of 8.6%, while the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey2 data yielded an estimate of 12.6 million adults using chiropractic manipulation in 2006—translating to a prevalence of 5.6%. Despite the popularity of chiropractic medicine, few well-designed studies have been conducted to support its use.3,4 Because of its designation as an alternative therapy, however, chiropractic manipulation has not been subjected to rigorous efficacy and safety evaluations.5

Given the inconsistency of the evidence to support chiropractic manipulation, the practice's safety profile is a concern. The risks associated with spinal manipulation are generally described in case reports and small series. Most serious adverse events described in the literature are cerebrovascular in nature and tend to occur after cervical manipulation.6,7 Fractures after spine manipulation are exceedingly rare, and published literature on this topic consists of a few isolated case reports, with all fractures occurring in the cervical spine in patients with an underlying pathologic condition.8-10

In 2009, Gouveia et al5 reviewed the published literature regarding all adverse events resulting from chiropractic manipulation. The authors found one randomized controlled trial, two case-control studies, six prospective studies, 12 surveys, three retrospective studies, and 100 case reports. The spectrum of complications identified ranged from benign and transient, such as local discomfort, to far more serious: stroke, myelopathy, radiculopathy, subdural hematoma, spinal fluid leakage, cauda equina syndrome, herniated disc, diaphragmatic palsy, and vertebral fractures. The authors were unable to perform a true meta-analysis because of the heterogeneity of the data, but they concluded that complications associated with chiropractic procedures are "frequent."5

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