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July 2006, Vol. 16, No. 3
Table of Contents
Autism and Glutathione • CBP® Nonprofit has 24 publications in 12 months • CBP® Research Presented at the International Spine Conference in Norway • CBP® to File Lawsuit Against Quackwatch • CCE Weathers the Storm • Chiropractic Culture • Dr Don Harrison is ICA's Chiropractor of the Year • Dr Jim Gudgel to Co-Instruct With Neuromechanical Innovations • Dr Deed Harrison Speaks at Palmer West • Experimental or Medical Necessity • Fine Tune Patient Communication • From Screening to the Value of Proper Posture • ICA at the Table • ICA's Newly Elected Board Members • Instrument Adjusting's Mechanical Advantage • It's Don's Opinion • Letters to the Editor • My New Whiplash Text is Available • Patient Expectation and Retention • Principles, Ethics and Other Bygone Ideals • Problematic Decision Spectrum • Research Corner • Triano and CCGPP's Will Give You Six Visits
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CBP® Nonprofit has 24 Publications in the Last 24 Months
by Deed Harrison, DC
After his undergraduate pre-chiropractic courses at the University of Utah, Dr. Deed Harrison graduated from Life-West in 1996. He is co-author of more than 50 peer-reviewed, indexed, research articles. These include 32 in JMPT, 3 in Chiropractic Technique, and 15 at major Index Medicus journals. He is a Reviewer for an Index Medicus Orthopaedic journal. He is a certified instructor for CBP® Seminars, has written three new CBP® text books, and is Vice-President of CBP® Nonprofit, Inc. He has a private practice in Elko, Nevada.

CBP® Nonprofit has had an excellent string of publications from July 2004 to July 2006, 22 publications in the Index Medicus and 2 in CINAHL! So far this year, we have 5 publications in the first 6 months (see list below).
Recently, in April, the Editor of the Australian Journal of Chiropractic and Osteopathy notified us that one of our basic science projects on our "Sheep" series was accepted for publication. This manuscript is entitled, "Increased multiaxial lumbar motion responses during multiple-impulse mechanical force manually assisted spinal manipulation", by Keller TS, Colloca CJ, Moore RJ, Gunzburg R, Harrison DE. You can find a full copy of this paper online now at www.chiroandosteo.com.
This project was completed at the Institute for Medical and Veterinarian Sciences in Adelaide, Australia. Dr. Chris Colloca and I collaborated with Rob Moore, PhD (IMVS), Robert Gunzburg, MD, PhD (Orthopedic Surgeon in Belguim), and Tony Keller, PhD (Florida Orthopaedic Institute, Tampa, FL). So far, our research team convened three times in Adelaide in 2004 and 2005 to collect the data for our series of projects.
This project used Dr. Colloca’s new Impulse Adjusting instrument to apply the forces. The research showed that multiple forces (Dr. Colloca’s new instrument puts out 12 impulses in 2 seconds = 6 Hertz) affects the stiffness and reflexes of the lumbar spine. Multiple thrusts can cause more vertebral movement than a single thrust alone. Previous research by our group has shown how disc degeneration affects the stiffness and reflexes of the lumbar spine and what types of forces and frequencies are best to achieve gold-standard basic science outcomes.
So far in 2006, we have been published in the Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, the European Spine Journal (2), Clinical Biomechanics, and Chiropractic & Osteopathy.
1. Keller TS, Colloca CJ, Moore RJ, Gunzburg R, Harrison DE. Increased multiaxial lumbar motion responses during multiple-impulse mechanical force manually assisted spinal manipulation. J Chiro Osteopathy 2006; April, 14:6:1-8.
2. Harrison DE, Janik TJ, Cailliet R, Harrison DD, Normand MC, Perron DL, Ferrantelli J. Validation of a Computer Analysis to Determine 3-D Rotations and Translations of the Rib Cage in Upright Posture from Three 2-D Digital Images. European Spine J 2006; Mar 18; [Epub ahead of print]
3. Keller TS, Colloca CJ, Harrison DE, Moore RJ, Gunzburg R. Muscular contributions to dynamic dorsoventral lumbar spine stiffness. European Spine J. 2006 Apr 29; [Epub ahead of print]
4. Colloca CJ, Keller TS, Harrison DE, Moore RJ, Gunzburg R, Harrison DD. Spinal manipulation force and duration affect vertebral movement and neuromuscular responses. Clin Biomech 2006; 21(3):254-62.
5. Harrison DE, Betz JW, Cailliet R, Harrison DD, Haas JW, Colloca CJ, Janik TJ. Radiographic pseudoscoliosis in healthy male subjects following voluntary lateral translation (side glide) of the thoracic spine. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2006; 87(1):117-22.
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