Craniosacral Therapy Use in Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus.

Curēus
Young ParkLeonid Tafler

Abstract

Nearly 700,000 adults in the US have normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH), but it is often misdiagnosed as Alzheimer's or Parkinson's disease. In fact, a small percentage of people with the disease are properly diagnosed. NPH presents classically with a triad of symptoms: ataxic gait, dementia, and urinary incontinence. Diagnosis and treatment are provided together through a lumbar puncture. However, the only effective treatment that exists is a shunt insertion, which is a highly invasive procedure with uncertain responsiveness. As NPH is primarily diagnosed in those in advanced ages (60s and 70s), adjunctive treatment modalities should be further studied. Here we present a case of a patient diagnosed by a neurosurgeon and neurologist with NPH and a candidate for a shunt insertion whose symptoms substantially improved with one month of osteopathic manipulative treatment. Osteopathic considerations and literature are also reviewed in the broader context of craniosacral treatment.

References

Mar 1, 1985·Neurology·R C PetersenE R Laws
Mar 8, 2005·The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine : Research on Paradigm, Practice, and Policy·Michael J CutlerMichael L Smith
Apr 5, 2016·Continuum : Lifelong Learning in Neurology·Michael A Williams, Jan Malm

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