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The Food & Drug
Administration (FDA) has granted a 510K medical device designation
to an instrument whose sole purpose is designed to correct the
vertebral subluxation. FDA 510K clearance allows for the legal
sale of an instrument and its particular indication of use. The
Integrator is chiropractic's first adjusting instrument to receive
an FDA 510K that has gone through a funded, independent
randomized, clinical trial.
Designed by Dr. Jay M. Holder, the Integrator is
manufactured by
Moyco/Union Broach, one of the oldest and largest surgical
instrument manufacturers in North America.
According to Lonnie Graybill, vice president of Moyco:
"Unlike some of the other adjusting instruments found on the
market, we have followed federal regulations; protecting ourselves
and the chiropractors that use the Integrator, we're in
compliance."
Not only is the Integrator's FDA clearance exceptional, but more
so is its history.
Originally created from scratch, borrowing nothing from any
current
adjusting instrument, the Integrator was designed to reproduce
what the hands of a chiropractor were intended to deliver: recoil,
torque and dynamic thrust. No other instrument in chiropractic has
ever had that in mind.
The Integrator would never have been invented at all, but for the
demands required to conduct a human population research study
designed by Robert Duncan, Ph.D., of the University of Miami
School of Medicine and funded in part by the Florida Chiropractic
Society. A totally new chiropractic adjusting instrument (the
Integrator) and a technique (Torque Release Technique) were born
out of this study by accident and without intention.
The purpose of the study - a 1-1/2 year-long randomized clinical
trial with 98 human subjects, blinded and with placebo control - was
conducted to determine the outcomes that subluxation-based
chiropractic had in affecting state of well being (quality of
life) in the human population.
The project, conceived by Dr. Holder, was performed at Exodus, a
residential addiction treatment facility in Miami. According to
Holder,
medical director/founder of Exodus, the addicted population best
serves as a proving ground for chiropractic for several reasons:
Chemicals are one of the major causes of subluxations. Twenty-
percent of the American population suffer from addiction. Up to
83% of all crime is drug-related. The nation's leading cause of
death is drug-related. And the addicted population is identified
as suffering from RDS (Reward Deficiency Syndrome), an inability
to express a normal state of well being or maintain a quality of
life equal to the rest of the general population.
Says Holder, "The last thing chiropractic needs is another
neck or low back study. Today chiropractic needs studies on human
potential, state of well being and quality of life."
However, in designing this study, a major hurdle had to be
overcome: consistency and reproducibility in the application of
delivering the chiropractic adjustment and some way to measure its
outcome.
To accomplish this, it was necessary to adjust by instrument. Yet,
all
chiropractic adjusting instruments tested were not reproducible
when applied to the patient. A major flaw in the studies and
claims attesting to the reproducibility of adjusting instruments
is that they test their
instruments while clamped in devices that fire the instrument
against a
measurement device (piezo-electric transducers). Any instrument
tested in this fashion is claimed reproducible.
Unfortunately, instruments held by hand against the skin of the
patient and fired by hand, are not reproducible, concludes Holder.
If the pressure against the tip of any adjusting instrument varies
as much as 1/8 of an ounce, the dynamic forces, frequency (Hz),
and kinetic energy characteristics will vary as much as
three-hundred percent!
To guarantee reproducibility, the development of an automatic trip
sensor mechanism had to be made. This would assure that the
instrument would fire when an exact predetermined pressure was
reached when placed against the skin of the patient and at
specific line of drive desired.
Further, this guarantees that a correct and specific frequency
(Hertz) is delivered and now allows for a more stable line of
drive, often sabotaged in instruments that must be squeezed to
fire. Since the purpose of the study was to determine the outcome
of traditional chiropractic, an instrument had to be developed
that delivered what the hands were intended to.
Up to now, all adjusting instruments provided only axial force.
However, the hands provide, at the option of the chiropractor, two
more dimensions: recoil and torque (right or left), as in the most
traditional application of the chiropractic adjustment, toggle
recoil. Torque allows for a line of drive that remains more stable
with deeper penetration and recoil allows for greater thrust
outcome with less force.
"Less is more," according to Holder. B.J. Palmer
demonstrated a nail being hammered into a wood beam. The nail was
driven into the wood after the hammer left the head of the nail,
not when it was struck (recoil). Speed is also a factor, in that
force = mass X acceleration. The Integrator fires at 1/10,000th of
a second, making it the fastest hand held adjusting instrument.
Unlike other instruments, that use metal caps and weights to
mediate or compensate for their inability to allow the doctor to
adjust force, the Integrator has true force adjustment capability.
In a rare interview for Drs. Patrick Gentempo and Christopher
Kent's "On Purpose" subscription tape service, Holder
discussed the objective outcome measurements of this study that
clearly validated the effectiveness of both the Integrator and
Torque Release Technique.
These results assessed by Dr. Duncan revealed a retention rate of
100%, a significant reduction in nursing station visits, an
improvement in depression that four weeks of chiropractic
surpassed what normally takes one year to achieve with standard
medical model treatment, and an improvement in anxiety that four
weeks of chiropractic surpassed what normally takes six months to
achieve with the standard medical model.
TRT is a non-linear vitalistic model and is the first
technique in chiropractic to be born out of randomized clinical
trial research first, instead of the other way around. TRT
training takes one weekend (14 hrs.) and doesn't require the use
of an instrument.
Dr. Frank Sovinsky, founder of Chiropractic Mentoring Experience
states, "The Integrator is a remarkable innovation in a hand
held instrument. TRT has opened up a whole new window in which to
view the tonal model of the vertebral subluxation complex."
Whether or not we wish to accept Torque Release Technique and the
Integrator, the research is in.
For more information or to receive a complimentary copy of the
"On
Purpose" audio tape, contact the Holder Research Institute
at: 800-490-7714 or 305-535-8803.

New Technique
Introduces,... EEG Confirms Results
One of the most
exciting events during Life College's 20th anniversary Homecoming
was the debut of the Torque Release Technique, billed as the
first and newest adjustment technique for chiropractic's second
century. The debut was no less exciting for having been unplanned.
Jay Holder, DC, MD, PhD, winner of the Albert Schweitzer prize in
medicine and chairman of the World Chiropractic Alliance
Addictionology Committee, was presenting 12 hours of training in
chiropractic addictionology and compulsive disorders at Life's
Marietta campus when he began to discuss his latest research on
what he states is chiropractic's first true scientific model of
subluxation-based chiropractic, "The Brain Reward Cascade
Theory."
Although it was not his intention, Dr. Holder found himself not
only unveiling a new technique and adjustment instrument but
within an hour was having it put to the test.
Lasca Hospers, DC, PhD, a renowned neuroscientist in EEG, was
intrigued by the concept and application of a new technique that
integrated the new scientific principles of quantum physics, right
brain processing (mind/body) and the original principles of
chiropractic.
Yet, her initial reaction was that Holder's Brain Reward Cascade
Model - a neurophysiological explanation of the subluxation vs.
state of well being - might not hold up under practical
application or pre- and post-scientific scrutiny.
In an auditorium packed to capacity, Dr. Hospers stood up and
challenged Holder to an on-the-spot-test. "I'll bring in our
equipment and run an EEG, then have you adjust the patient with
your new instrument and technique and then run another EEG to
compare the difference, "said Hospers, who is a prominent
expert in the brain mapping of patients suffering from Attention
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorders (ADHD).
For the challenge, Hospers chose a person known to have ADHD. ADHD
afflicts four million children in the U.S. and a larger number of
adults. A compulsive disorder caused by a gene defect, ADHD is
considered the most common pediatric disorder.
Hospers knew that the person she chose would have abnormal
prefrontal spiking on EEG and the pre-adjustment strip confirmed
that prediction, which is typical in ADHD patients.
Holder then checked the patient by using the Torque Release
Technique methodology and adjusted with a new hand-held instrument
prototype called the Integrator. Holder noted that "This
instrument delivers a third dimensional force, Torque, that no
other adjusting instrument in chiropractic does."
After the patient was adjusted, a post EEG was run and examined.
Hospers explained her findings: "All of the abnormal
prefrontal spiking found earlier was gone and that the entire EEG
was now essentially normal."
As the program continued, Holder explained that both the
Integrator and the Torque Release Technique were originally
developed for the purpose of conducting a human population
research study on the effects of subluxation-based chiropractic
and drug-addicted individuals in a residential addiction hospital
setting.
Designed by Robert Duncan, PhD, at the University of Miami School
of Medicine and the Holder Research Institute, and supported in
part by a grant from the Florida Chiropractic Society, this
randomized clinical trial (blinded and with placebo control)
represents the largest human population study in the history of
chiropractic.
"We had to invent a totally reproducible chiropractic
adjustment instrument that delivered what the hands did and make
it inter-professionally reproducible as well, or we would not have
satisfied the University's department of biostatistics research
design standards," said Holder.
The findings of the 18-month study are scheduled for publication
early this year.
This next-generation technique
recognizes that the nervous system has unique memory in its
ability to learn, grow it adapts to or recovers from. Therefore,
it was necessary to provide a method of analysis and adjusting
technique that has non-linear, time sequence priorities - a
neurologically based analysis rather than a mechanically based
one.
Most importantly, you may integrate current
techniques that you may still want to use into this larger
application model."
Seminars to teach, demonstrate and experience this new analysis
and adjusting instrument will be offered.
For more information contact the Holder Research Institute at
1-800-490-7714 or 1-305-535-8803.
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