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Heart Association's 19th International Joint Conference on Stroke and Cerebral CirculationBy Editorial Staff Carlini, Philip Lee, MD, Georges McCormick, MD, and Gregory Albers, MD, reported on their survey findings of the incidence of chiropractic cervical manipulation causing stroke at the AmericanThe survey asked 177 Calif. neurologists about the number of patients they treated in the past two years who had suffered a stroke within 24 hours of cervical chiropractic manipulation.Though only 36 percent of the neurologists responded to the survey, "56 strokes were reported to be related to cervical chiropractic manipulation." Carlini said the rate of stroke in this study is "estimated to be about one in every 500,000 manipulations, affirming rates seen in a similar physician survey from the Netherlands." According to the survey data, the strokes were usually caused by dissection of the vertebral arteries. A dissection was defined as occurring when the inner and outer walls of the artery split apart, causing blood to leak into the space in between. As the space fills with blood, the inner wall of the artery swells and cuts off circulation to the brain. "Our intent is not to scare people away from chiropractic manipulations. Indeed, most interventions by allopathic physicians have a higher complication rate than chiropractic interventions," said co-investigator Philip Lee, MD. "We still need a better understanding of this issue and at this point we don't want to make it a public issue that will raise unnecessary fear, said Dr. Carlini. Quoted extensively in the AHA news release was Louis Sportelli, DC, acting as spokesperson for the American Chiropractic Association. He made the following points:
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