VISCERAL MOBILIZATION: STATE OF ART FOR SYSTEMIC PATHOLOGIES MANAGEMENT
Keywords:
Angiogenesis, visceral mobilization, reflex, reflexogenie, Manual TherapyAbstract
The global disease burden has evident about significant increase in many systemic diseases such as central obesity, diabetes mellitus and atherosclerosis. The concept of invasive and pharmacological management of various systemic diseases has seen a paradigm shift towards conservative management techniques like physical therapy in the last two decades for multiple conditions like type II Diabetes Mellitus, Complex Regional Pain Syndrome Type I, Atherosclerosis, Hypertension and Peripheral Arterial Disease.
Multiple exercise guidelines have been created and customized and implemented worldwide to address discussed pathologies. However, it has been observed that the effects of exercises are short term requiring a life time commitment to continue the exercise regimen. Henceforth, the idea of visceral mobilization which is a hands-on treatment method implemented to mobilize the organs brought forward with pronounced systemic effects including angiogenesis and healing of aged or injured tissue along with symptomatic management1.
A wide range of systemic effects have been observed with the spinal manipulation and soft tissue mobilization leading to the confirmation of physiological effectiveness of visceral mobilization. Spinal control produces changes in muscle shaft reaction, nocifensive reflex reaction and neuronal movement, electromyography, and immunologic reaction. Further, it is seen to deliver physiological changes including autonomic, circulatory, lymphatic and immunologic capacities, instinctive reaction, quality articulation, neuroanatomy, capacity and pathology, and cell reaction to in vitro recreated massage.