JP- for no real reason other than curiosity...what made you switch your feelings about cranial? I had noticed early on you were more open to the idea
I think it would be foolish to simply write off any potentially useful treatment modality before fully understanding it and learning about it...not to mention trying to use it. So when presented with the idea of cranial I feel the best approach is to take the anecdotal claims with a grain of salt and really research what is going on...not something that can be done overnight.
So as an OMM Fellow cranial was the last hurdle...the final frontier for me.
Since 2003 I have taken 3 separate cranial courses as well as helped in a few others. I am a member of the cranial academy and have even participated in research studying the cranial model. I have helped teach cranial in OMM lab, as it is part of the required curricula of DO schools.
Here is what bothers me about cranial as it is taught:
1. No concise model. There are several different methods of describing cranial and a few are intertwined, but none have me convinced. When one model doesnt fit perfectly there are several ways that people try to explain things to make the model fit.
2. Lack of inter examiner reliability. There are a few new studies coming out on this so I can't go too far, but basically you can have a cranial pattern and 6 people will describe it 6 different ways. Are they all interpreting the same thing? Maybe...maybe not.
3. Lack of convincing research. True...most of OMT doesnt have very strong research backing, but most of what is used has a sound biomechanical and physiologic basis. When it comes to cranial research the research that is supportive of OMT is suspect at best and the research that is against cranial is quickly mocked by the cranial field. Brings me to my last point....
4. Cranial has an almost cult following. It seems enough for most of these folks that there is no true understood mechanism, no solid research and no agreement among peers.
Now...have I used cranial on patients? Yes.
As I said above, I could not in good faith argue against something unless I myself have tried it, seen it or had it done.
Do I get results? Sometimes...but they are inconsistent.
Who benefits from cranial? Patients who believe they will benefit and patients who are told this is their "last hope".
What do I think is happening?
Are people feeling something with cranial? Yes. I think they are feeling myofascial and musculoskeletal structures that are surrounding the temporal and zygomatic bones. I DO NOT think they are feeling the movement of the dura, temporal bones of CSF.
A simple exercise is to place your hands on a person in the vault hold. Have the patient clench their teeth, push their tongue against the roof of their mouth, push their tongue backwards...all of those will produce movements that the cranial people say "mimick" cranial movements. I dont think they are mimicking anything...I think thats what you are really feeling.
So I think cranial therapy is often no more than myofascial release to the skull and upper cervical region.
So...those are my own personal feelings. Developed over the last 5 years...particularly the last 3 through patients, courses and research.
So just as a reminder to those of you in here who want to bach on cranial...thats fine and its you right, but at least take the time to study what it is you are fighting against before opening your mouth. It will make you sound a lot smarter and bolster your argument that much more.