Chiropractic Management of Cow's Milk Protein Intolerance in Infants With Sleep Dysfunction Syndrome: A Therapeutic
Trial Jennifer R. Jamison MBBCh, PhD, EdD and Neil J. Davies DC
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Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics, Volume 30, Issue 3, March 2007, Page
247
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Abstract
Objective
In addition to the more usual cutaneous, gastrointestinal, and respiratory problems, infants with cow's milk intolerance (CMI) may present
with a disturbed sleep pattern. Frustrated mothers may turn to their doctor of chiropractic for assistance. This pilot study shows how a
therapeutic trial may offer a realistic, noninvasive approach to the chiropractic management of infants with this clinical problem.
Methods
A pilot study to describe the presentation and treatment of infants presenting with disturbed sleep patterns to a chiropractic clinic was
undertaken. Infants fulfilling a clinical screening protocol for CMI were selected for a therapeutic trial. The sleep behavior of subjects
was monitored over a 4-week period during which they were managed by dietary change and a high-impulse, low-amplitude whole-of-body
chiropractic management protocol.
Results
Fifty-nine infants presented with disturbed sleep. Of these, 19 met the clinical criteria used to establish the diagnosis CMI. The mothers
of breast-fed infants were counseled on how to implement a dairy-free diet, and those infants who were artificially fed were changed from
cow's milk–based formulae to either a partially or wholly hydrolyzed formula. Fourteen achieved a stable sleep pattern within the study
period. In 5 instances, the sleep pattern remained problematic, but other clinical evidence of hypersensitivity reactions attributable to CMI
disappeared. By the end of the study, no subject had demonstrable evidence of either biomechanical derangement or functional neurologic
imbalance.
Conclusion
CMI should be considered as a possibility in infants with disturbed sleep patterns who present for chiropractic care. This study
describes how a therapeutic trial involving dietary modification, parental counseling, and comprehensive chiropractic care may offer a
noninvasive approach to excluding and/or managing this condition. Further research is required before definitive recommendations can be
made.
Subject-index terms: Infant; Sleep Disorders; Infant Behavior; Food Hypersensitivity
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