Entrainment Between Clinician and Patient During Palpation
- Conditions
- Doctor Patient Relation
- Interventions
- Procedure: CV4Procedure: touching
- Registration Number
- NCT03579238
- Lead Sponsor
- Western University of Health Sciences
- Brief Summary
This study will assess the physiological interaction between the palpating clinician and a research participant using a laser Doppler flow meter to detect changes in blood flow parameters.
- Detailed Description
Research participants will lie on their backs on a soft table while a licensed physician, with special training in osteopathic palpation and manipulation approaches, touches, and administers a slight inhibition of occipital bone motion for five minutes per stage. Both will have a non invasive skin sensor (probe), called a laser Doppler flow meter, attached to their forehead to detect changes in subcutaneous blood flow velocity. The signal from the device will be augmented and transmitted for display onto a digital polygraph recorder. Then, using Fourier transformation software, the signal will be displayed as a graph for spectral analysis to determine the effect on specific wave forms related to autonomic activity. The interaction between the two individuals will be assessed for evidence of entrainment phenomenon, i.e., the influence of one biorhythm upon another.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 20
- healthy adult that can lie on his or her back on a padded table without moving for 35 minutes.
- head trauma within the last six months, seizure disorder, pregnant, brain disease or injury, using beta or alpha blocker medication, unable to lie still for 35 minutes, allergy to the hypoallergenic sticky tape used to attach sensor to forehead
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SEQUENTIAL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Occipital motion inhibition CV4 The clinician gently inhibits motion of the participant's occiput into flexion phase of the primary respiratory mechanism, and allows extension phase only. Upon sensing a still point, where no further flexion motion is palpated, the clinician will state to the research assistant "now" to indicate he feels a still point. This position is held for 5 minutes without moving. This is called a CV4 or modified CV4 intervention. A five minute rest period follows in which the clinician removes his hands from underneath the participant's head and places them next to the patient on the table, but not in contact with the patient. touching touching The clinician lifts the patient's head passively off the table in order to place his hands underneath the participant's head, palms facing upwards and in contact with the back of the head of the participant. The participant's head is gently lowered to rest upon the clinician's hands. No external force is provided by the clinician upon the participant's head as the head rests in the clinician's palms on the table. This position is held for 5 minutes without moving. This is called a "touching" intervention and is meant to be a sham. A five minute rest period follows in which the clinician removes his hands from underneath the participant's head and places them next to the patient on the table, but not in contact with the patient.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Entrainment of still points between clinician and research participant within 1 minute of each other (arbitrary designation) When one person has a still point it may or may not affect the other person. If it does, then entrainment will have occurred. The clinician's intent is to create a still point in the participant by inhibiting occipital motion. This is measurable using the laser Doppler flow meter. The induction of the still point, which is manifest on the polygraph and in spectroscopy as a distinct diminished amplitude at the .08-1.5 Hz frequency, may entrain the clinician to have a still point as well.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Western University of Health Sciences
🇺🇸Pomona, California, United States