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Technic and Practice of Chiropractic

Chapter 4: INTRODUCTION
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About This Book

A compact clinical manual for students and practitioners that begins with detailed instruction in vertebral palpation and tactile examination, then explains nerve-tracing and the theory, varieties, and identification of subluxations. It lays out general principles and a sequence of specific adjusting techniques, followed by discussion of disease causation, the process of cure, adjunct therapies, and spino-organic (nerve-to-organ) relationships. Supplementary material includes a table linking conditions to adjustments and practical chapters on office equipment, examination schedules, patient management, prognosis, and professional limitations.

No two students, approaching for the first time the study of Chiropractic, approach from the same angle. Their viewpoints differ. In order that all may gain as nearly as possible the same viewpoint from which to consider in turn the sections of this book, it will be well if each student reads the entire book before beginning to memorize its parts and convert them into practical working knowledge.

An effort should be made, abandoning all other, to acquire the Chiropractic viewpoint. This accomplished, the rest of the task requires time and patience alone, without waste labor. The section on Vertebral Palpation should be studied step by step, the study of each step being combined with practice in it. Likewise the section on Nerve-Tracing, theory preceding practice. The study of the Technic of Adjusting should occupy those months immediately preceding the commencement of actual adjusting practice and continue during such practice. The chapters on Practice are intended for the student about to enter the field. The table of Spino-Organic Connection can be best understood by those who have studied or are studying the anatomy and physiology of the nervous system.

Let every page be studied with a good medical dictionary open at the elbow of the reader. Pass no word without comprehension, no detail without mastery. He who would seek to modify the life processes of the human body must fortify himself against fatal error with every bit of knowledge he can acquire.