Letters
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George Mychaskiw
To the Editor:
In the clinical practice article by David C. Mason, DO, and Carman A. Ciervo, DO,1 the authors comment on the use of osteopathic manipulative treatment (OMT) for neonates who have Erb-Duchenne palsy, or brachial plexus injuries. The authors thoroughly discuss the anatomic and diagnostic characteristics of this condition. They are also to be complimented for their diagnostic skills. As an osteopathic physician who has participated in the care of infants for more than 15 years, I doubt that many other practitioners could perform the palpatory, visual, and range-of-motion examinations in the unsedated infant that are described by the authors.1 Certainly, such examinations are beyond my capability. Nevertheless, the potential for using OMT in this condition is interesting.
Unfortunately, Drs Mason and Ciervo1 present no evidence regarding why OMT techniques useful for thoracic outlet syndrome should also be considered efficacious for Erb-Duchenne palsy. Although their hypothesis that myofascial release can ameliorate this condition is compelling, they present no data—even from their clinical practice—that this treatment approach would be of benefit.
Given the prevalence of brachial plexus injuries in the neonate population2 and the novelty of the osteopathic medical approach in such cases, it should be rather simple to undertake a prospective, randomized controlled trial of the authors' suggested techniques with well-defined endpoints to validate their assumptions, which are currently unfounded.
The authors are correct in noting that brachial plexus injuries carry emotional weight for parents and constitute a source of malpractice litigation.1 In light of this consideration, it is of particular importance that OMT modalities undergo the same scrutiny of the scientific method that is required of more conventional treatment options.
Finally, I fail to understand the point of including unsupported and nonreferenced statements in JAOA—The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association about the alleged benefit of therapeutic touch to “facilitate the body's innate ability to heal.”1 Such statements are not worthy of scientific journals and do nothing to enhance the wider medical community's acceptance of osteopathic medicine.
All scientific discovery begins with unproven assumptions, but it is incumbent on those of us in the osteopathic medical profession to present properly tested and validated data before encouraging the use of new treatment modalities in our patients.
1 Mason DC, Ciervo CA. Brachial plexus injuries in neonates: an osteopathic approach. J Am Osteopath Assoc. 2009;109:87-91. Available at: http://www.jaoa.org/cgi/content/full/109/2/87. Accessed April 10, 2009.Search in Google Scholar
2 Foad SL, Mehlman CT, Ying J. The epidemiology of neonatal brachial plexus palsy in the United States. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2008;90:1258-1264.10.2106/JBJS.G.00853Search in Google Scholar PubMed
The American Osteopathic Association
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Articles in the same Issue
- LETTERS
- Survey Results: OMT and CAM
- Brachial Plexus Injuries in Neonates
- Letters
- BOOK REVIEWS
- Generation XL: The Childhood Obesity Pandemic: A Community-Based Solution
- EDITORIALS
- To Prepare for Change, AOA Publications Turn to the Internet
- STUDENT CONTRIBUTIONS
- Improving the Quality of Suicide Risk Assessments in the Psychiatric Emergency Setting: Physician Documentation of Process Indicators
- MEDICAL EDUCATION
- The DO Difference: An Analysis of Causal Relationships Affecting the Degree-Change Debate
- CASE REPORTS
- Brain Amyloidoma With Cerebral Hemorrhage
- LETTERS
- Response
- Cranial Palpation Pressures Used by Osteopathy Students
- Phantom Arrhythmia: Is It a Clinical Myth?
- Does Prenatal Ultrasound Increase Risk of Autism?
- Response
- CORRECTIONS
- Corrections
Articles in the same Issue
- LETTERS
- Survey Results: OMT and CAM
- Brachial Plexus Injuries in Neonates
- Letters
- BOOK REVIEWS
- Generation XL: The Childhood Obesity Pandemic: A Community-Based Solution
- EDITORIALS
- To Prepare for Change, AOA Publications Turn to the Internet
- STUDENT CONTRIBUTIONS
- Improving the Quality of Suicide Risk Assessments in the Psychiatric Emergency Setting: Physician Documentation of Process Indicators
- MEDICAL EDUCATION
- The DO Difference: An Analysis of Causal Relationships Affecting the Degree-Change Debate
- CASE REPORTS
- Brain Amyloidoma With Cerebral Hemorrhage
- LETTERS
- Response
- Cranial Palpation Pressures Used by Osteopathy Students
- Phantom Arrhythmia: Is It a Clinical Myth?
- Does Prenatal Ultrasound Increase Risk of Autism?
- Response
- CORRECTIONS
- Corrections