Glossary
Anatomy
Conditions
Bodily Movements
Chiropractic Care
Anatomy
Articulation: A joint formed where two or more bones in the
body meet. Your foot bone, for example, forms an articulation
with your leg bone. That articulation is called the ankle.
Atlas: Another name for the first cervical vertebra, which
is located at the top of your spine and supports your head.
Misalignment of the atlas can place stress on your
neuromusculoskeletal system.
Axis: Another name for the second cervical vertebra, which
is located in your neck. This is an important joint that
contributes significantly to your neck's range of motion.
Biomechanics: The body's mechanics, such as how muscles,
bones, tendons and ligaments work to produce movement.
Coccyx: Commonly called the tailbone, the coccyx is composed
of four separate but fused vertebrae that make up the bottom of
your spine.
Cervical spine: The area of your spine containing the seven
vertebrae that compose the neck.
Joint: A meeting point of two or more bones in your body
that functions like a door hinge. Joints, like hinges, sometimes
get stuck, or subluxated. Your chiropractor can adjust them to
help improve your health.
Kyphosis: Refers to the shape of your mid-back and sacral
regions of your spine, which are shaped like a backward letter
C.
Ligament: Tissue that bonds bone to bone. Ligaments are
strong and provide excellent support, which is especially
important in joints like your ankle.
Lordosis: Refers to the shape of the cervical and lumbar
regions of your spine, which are shaped like the letter C. You
are not born with this curve, but develop it as an infant when
you start to sit, crawl and stand.
Lumbar: The area of your spine containing the five vertebrae
that compose the lower back.
Muscle: Contractile tissue that allows body parts to move.
While most people don't realize it, muscles are considered
bodily organs.
Muscle tone: A slight, continuous contraction of muscle
fibers that is necessary to maintain posture, keep muscles
healthy and squeeze blood in your veins back to your heart.
Without muscle tone, your muscles would get weak and be
susceptible to injury.
Neuromusculoskeletal system:
A broad term referring to the neurological system, including the
brain, spinal cord and nerves, the muscle system, which includes
muscles, ligaments, tendons and connective tissues, and the
skeletal system, which includes bones of the skull, spine and
limbs.
Sacroiliac joint: The joint between the sacrum and the
ilium, which is a flat bone that helps compose your pelvis. You
have two sacroiliac joints, which allow for proper pelvic
movement. When they get irritated or inflamed it causes
significant pain.
Sacrum: A triangular-shaped bone between your pelvic bones
that is the foundation for your spine. The sacrum helps transfer
weight, allows for small pelvic movements and meets with the
pelvic bones to form the sacroiliac joints.
Soft tissue: Non-bony tissue, like muscles, disks, tendons
and ligaments.
Spine: Your spine supports your body and protects the
delicate spinal cord and nerves. It comprises 33 vertebrae,
grouped into different categories based on location and anatomy.
These locations are the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, sacral and
coccygeal regions.
Tender point:
One of several pea-size, focal and hypersensitive sites found
most commonly in muscle and connective tissue that, unlike a
trigger point,
does not cause pain in other regions when stimulated.
Tendon: An extension of muscle that functions as an
attachment between muscle and bone. Tendons are extremely
strong, but not very capable of contracting.
Thoracic: The area of your spine containing the 12 vertebrae
that compose the upper back.
Trigger point: One of several pea-size, focal and
hypersensitive sites found most commonly in muscle and
connective tissue that, when stimulated, can cause pain in a
specific region. A stimulated trigger point in the back of your
neck, for example, can cause a dull pain that radiates to the
area around your eyes.
Vertebrae: Bony segments that form your spinal column.
Humans normally have 33 of these stacked on top of each other.
There are seven in your neck, 12 in your mid back, five in your
low back, five in your sacrum and four in your tailbone.
Conditions
Acute: Symptoms or conditions that have developed recently,
which are usually sharp or severe.
Chronic: Symptoms or conditions that have persisted for
weeks, months or even years, which can range from mild to
severe.
Degeneration: A breaking down of bodily tissue, such as that
in the spine. Poor spinal mechanics, trauma and aging can cause
a thinning or degeneration of spinal disks, the same way driving
a car wears out tires.
Health: To chiropractors, health isn't just an absence of
disease, but a state of positive mental, physical and spiritual
functioning.
Misalignment: Improperly aligned joints in the body. These
are usually associated with subluxations, and can stress your
neuromusculoskeletal system.
Spasm: Involuntary shortening of muscle fiber. Spasm often
occurs after an injury, but many things can cause it. During
spasm, muscles cannot be relaxed and the associated joints have
a decreased range of motion.
Strain: An injury to muscles or ligaments caused by
overstretching, overuse, tearing, tension or torsion. Poor
posture can also strain these tissues, as it places increased
demands on them.
Subluxation:
An area in the spine that moves improperly. It occurs when
spinal bones become misaligned or lose their normal range of
motion. A subluxation can stress the entire nervous system.
Vertebral subluxation complex: A number of conditions
associated with a subluxation that includes abnormal joint
motion, abnormal nerve expression, abnormal muscle function,
abnormal soft tissue and abnormal function of internal organs
and systems.
Whiplash: An injury that occurs when the head is suddenly
accelerated and decelerated, in a whip-like motion, forward to
backward or side to side. While many people associate whiplash
with motor vehicle accidents, the injury can also occur during
sports or falls.
Exercise
Active exercise: An exercise performed without assistance. A
sit-up, for example, is an active exercise.
Passive exercise: An exercise performed with assistance,
usually from a therapist, that requires the exerciser to exert
little physical energy. Passive exercises are important during
the acute, or early, phase of recovery from an injury.
Resisted exercise: An exercise performed against resistance.
All weight-training exercises, for example, are resisted
exercises.
Bodily Movements
Extension: Movement of two body parts away from each other,
such as when you look up and move your chin away from your
chest.
Flexion: Movement of two body parts toward each other, such
as when you flex your bicep and move your hand and wrist to your
shoulder.
Pronation: Inward or medial movement of a body part. If one
arm is stretched out palm up, for example, and then rotated so
that the palm is facing down, the movement is called pronation.
Range of motion: The arc through which a joint or joints can
move. Chiropractors often use the term when discussing
dysfunctional joints. A normal neck, for example, can move about
70 to 90 degrees to the right. Chiropractors would say a neck
that only rotated 50 degrees had a restricted range of motion.
Supination: Outward or lateral movement of a body part. If
one arm is stretched out palm down, for example, and then
rotated so that the palm is facing up, the movement is called
supination.
Chiropractic Care
Acute care: Treatment directed at relieving painful
symptoms, which have usually developed recently.
Activator tool: Also known as an activator adjusting
instrument, the T-shaped, handheld activator tool allows
chiropractors to give precise, low-force and high-speed
adjustments.
Adjustment:
The application of thrust to a joint in the body, using a
specific speed, depth and force. Chiropractors deliver this
adjustment by hand or with a small handheld device called an
activator tool. Adjustments are the primary method of
removing joint misalignments or subluxations.
Maintenance
or preventive care: Chiropractic care that
focuses on maintaining patients' optimal health. This includes
regular chiropractic checkups, which allow chiropractors to
detect and correct
subluxations
or spinal misalignments.
Manual treatment:
Treatment by hand, which may consist of adjustments,
mobilizations, traction, massage and other techniques, all aimed
at influencing the spine and its related components.
Mobilization: A form of physical therapy in which
chiropractors apply gentle, often repetitive movements to stuck
joints in the body without the use of thrust.
Palpation: Examination by touch. Palpation is one of several
methods chiropractors use to assess tissue beneath the skin,
like muscle, ligament, tendon, bone and fat. Using their hands,
chiropractors can palpate tissue to determine its size,
consistency, mobility and general health.
Soft tissue therapy:
Therapy directed at the muscles, tendons and ligaments of the
body. This therapy can include massage, which your chiropractor
or a massage therapist can administer. Massage helps to relax
tight muscles, increase circulation and promote healing.
Thrust: A force applied during a chiropractic adjustment.
Types of Health Care
Allopathic medicine: A method of treatment that focuses on
producing effects that are the opposite of those associated with
an illness. If someone had an illness that caused dry skin, for
example, allopathic doctors would prescribe moisturizing
remedies. The word comes from combining the Greek allos,
meaning other, and patheia, meaning suffering.
Chiropractic:
Chiropractic is a health-care profession based on diagnosing,
treating and preventing neuromusculoskeletal disorders, and a
health-care philosophy centered on the effects those disorders
and other lifestyle factors have on a patient's nervous system
and overall health.
The word chiropractic means to practice with the hands, as it
comes from combining the Greek words cheir, meaning hand,
and praktikos, meaning practical or operative. The term
refers to chiropractors' hands-on techniques, especially
adjustments, which some call manipulations or spinal
manipulative therapy. But it could also refer to chiropractors'
guiding hands, as they help patients adopt lifestyle habits that
promote health and well-being.
Holistic medicine:
A method of treatment that focuses on the entire
person and his or her environment, rather than partitioned
illnesses or body parts.
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Last
updated January 1, 2007 |