The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTIONVerdict Score 69

Hands-on treatment works on your nervous system like a pain mute button — not a structural fix.

If you're getting hands-on treatment this week, book your gym session or physio exercises within 90 minutes of your appointment. That's the pain-relief window — use it to load the tissue while your nervous system is calm.

  1. Here's what's really happening: The "pop" you hear during manipulation is gas releasing from a joint — studies confirm it has zero correlation with feeling better.
  2. The myth that won't die: Your joints don't get realigned or "put back" during treatment — those beliefs make you passive and dependent, which is worse long-term.
  3. The first thing to start doing: Schedule active exercise within 90 minutes of any manual therapy session — that's the pain-relief window, and loading the tissue in it is what makes the change last.

Think of manual therapy like a dimmer switch for pain signals. Your joints are covered in sensors that, when pressed or moved rhythmically, send calming signals up your spinal cord to your brain — temporarily turning down the volume on pain. The dimmer doesn't fix the wiring. Once the session ends, the switch drifts back to where it was. That's why exercises create the permanent change, and hands-on work just opens the window to do them pain-free.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.
Physio Engine — Mechanisms Review

Manual Therapy
Mechanisms,
Not Magic

The neurological truth behind hands-on treatment — and why the crack doesn't mean what you think it means

General — Multi-Region Conviction: Moderate

If you're getting hands-on treatment this week, book your exercises within 90 minutes of your appointment.

Manual therapy opens a pain-relief window by calming your nervous system. That's when your movement tolerance is highest — loading the tissue in that window is what makes the change actually stick.

Works immediately. No equipment needed. Just schedule the sessions in the right order.

Hands-on treatment works on your nervous system like a pain mute button — not a structural fix.

Think of manual therapy like a dimmer switch for pain signals. Your joints are covered in sensors that, when pressed or moved rhythmically, send calming signals up your spinal cord to your brain — temporarily turning down the volume on pain. The dimmer doesn't fix the wiring. Once the session ends, the switch drifts back to where it was. That's why exercises create the permanent change, and the hands-on work just opens the window to do them pain-free.

  1. Here's what's really happening: The "pop" you hear during manipulation is gas releasing from a joint — studies confirm it has zero correlation with feeling better.
  2. The myth that won't die: Your joints don't get realigned or "put back" during treatment — those beliefs make you passive and dependent, which is worse long-term.
  3. The first thing to start doing: Schedule active exercise within 90 minutes of any manual therapy session — that's the pain-relief window, and loading the tissue inside it is what makes the change last.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

The Neurophysiology Nobody Explains

Manual therapy applies mechanical force to the body, triggering a cascade of neurological responses. The traditional biomechanical models — joint realignment, subluxation correction, fascial release — are not supported by the evidence and cause harm when communicated as fact to patients. Here's what actually happens:

1

Peripheral Stimulation

Mechanical input activates sensors (A-beta mechanoreceptors) in your skin, joint capsule, and muscles, firing signals toward the spinal cord.

2

Spinal Pain Inhibition

That barrage triggers counter-irritation at the spinal level, reducing the "wind-up" effect where pain signals amplify each other — a transient analgesic effect. MODERATE evidence

3

Brain's Own Painkillers

Signals ascend to activate your brain's pain-dampening centres, initiating descending inhibition via your body's natural opioids and serotonin. MODERATE evidence

4

Contextual Amplification

Patient expectation, therapeutic alliance, and the experience of "being treated" activate the same brain centres via placebo pathways. This effect is substantial, measurable, and clinically significant. HIGH evidence

Neurophysiological cascade of manual therapy — dark cinematic spinal cord visualization

The "crack" (cavitation): A real physical event — rapid joint separation causes gas bubble formation. MRI studies confirm it. But it does NOT correlate with better clinical outcomes compared to non-cavitating techniques. The crack is a sound, not a therapeutic mechanism.

Fascial remodeling: The forces required to permanently deform human fascia far exceed what any clinician can safely apply to a living patient. Soft tissue work and IASTM likely operate via localized nerve stimulation, not mechanical tissue lengthening. Structural fascial changes at 12 weeks: zero evidence.

Mechanism Evidence Summary

Mechanism Quality of Evidence Key Limitation
Biomechanical (joint repositioning, adhesion breaking) CRITICALLY LOW Structural changes transient; no correlation with symptom improvement
Peripheral neurophysiological (mechanoreceptor activation) LOW–MODERATE Chemical marker changes inconsistent vs sham
Spinal-mediated inhibition (dorsal horn) MODERATE Indirect proxy measures only; can't observe spinal cord in vivo
Supraspinal (brain pain-dampening activation) MODERATE Can't isolate mechanical vs placebo activation of same brain structures
Placebo / contextual (expectation, therapeutic alliance) HIGH Overlapping biology — placebo activates the same pathways as "real" MT

Who Responds to Manual Therapy

There's no biomechanical test that determines MT candidacy. The best predictors are clinical phenotype markers — presentation type, timeline, and psychological readiness for active treatment.

Good MT Candidate

  • Onset less than 12 weeks
  • Positive expectation ("I respond well to hands-on")
  • Localised pain, not widespread
  • Pain-dominant — movement is feared
  • Willing to engage with exercise after sessions

Poor MT Candidate

  • Chronic (>12 weeks) without exercise engagement
  • Severe widespread pain sensitivity
  • High fear-avoidance beliefs
  • Passive dependence ("only you can fix me")
  • Hypermobility — stabilisation exercises first-line

Outcome Evidence by Condition

Condition MT Effect vs Control Sham-Controlled? Benefit Duration
Acute/Subacute Low Back Pain Small–Moderate (SMD ~0.45–0.60) Yes — equivocal vs sham 1–6 weeks only
Chronic Neck Pain Small (often clinically irrelevant alone) Yes — equivocal vs sham Short-term; needs exercise combo
Non-Specific Shoulder Pain Negligible to Small Yes — Real MT = Sham MT Immediate to short-term
Knee/Hip Osteoarthritis Small Yes Immediate/short-term only
Carpal Tunnel (paired with exercise) Moderate No Short-term functional gain

When to Stop and Refer Immediately

Manual therapy red flags — dark cinematic clinical anatomy visualization

Cervical HVLA — Vascular Emergency Signs

  • New severe headache "unlike any other" during or after neck treatment → Immediate A&E referral
  • Any new neurological symptoms during neck treatment — double vision, difficulty swallowing, slurred speech, sudden loss of coordination, drop attacks → Stop immediately, call 999 / 911
  • Known vertebral artery pathology or recent cervical trauma → Absolute contraindication for cervical HVLA

The IFOMPT 2020 Cervical Framework formally retired the old vertebral artery extension-rotation screening test — it is clinically unreliable. No single test can rule out cervical artery pathology. Current standard requires: comprehensive vascular history, cardiovascular risk profiling, and shared decision-making — the patient must be explicitly informed of the rare but serious stroke risk before cervical HVLA is applied.

General Contraindications

  • Severe osteoporosis or bone metastasis → HVLA is absolutely contraindicated; gentle soft tissue only if medically cleared
  • Active inflammatory arthropathy (RA with atlanto-axial instability) → Screen sensory testing; avoid cervical HVLA
  • Active infection or skin breakdown over target area → Local contraindication
  • Hypermobility syndromes (EDS, generalised hypermobility) → Avoid Grade V; stabilisation exercises first-line

Stop Any MT Session Immediately If:

  • New neurological symptoms develop during cervical treatment → Stop, emergency services
  • Worsening headache, visual changes, or dizziness during neck treatment → Stop, position supine, medical referral
  • Unexplained weight loss + ongoing MSK pain → GP referral for malignancy screening before continuing
  • Escalating night pain + fever → GP referral same day
  • Bowel or bladder changes + low back pain → A&E immediately (cauda equina)

What Sham-Controlled Trials Actually Show

Sham MT = a fake technique mimicking the setup and touch of real MT without the therapeutic force. This is the pivotal evidence that separates mechanism myth from reality:

CPG Model vs Sham-Controlled RCT Evidence

CPGs pre-2020 | Biomechanical model

MT works via joint realignment, subluxation correction, and fascial remodeling. Apply the technique with precision to the specific joint segment identified as dysfunctional.

VS

Lavazza et al. 2021 (BMJ Open SR) + Naranjo-Cinto 2022 (RCT)

Sham MT achieves equivalent clinical outcomes to real MT. For non-specific shoulder pain: Real MT + Exercise = Sham MT + Exercise. Zero between-group differences in pain, disability, or range of motion.

Clinical implication: Session design should prioritise contextual variables — expectation, therapeutic alliance, honest mechanism explanation — over technique precision. The specific biomechanical application matters less than previously assumed.

Pain Relief Outside the Target Area

Biomechanical model expectation

Treating a specific joint should relieve pain in the corresponding body segment — thoracic manipulation for thoracic pain, cervical for cervical.

VS

Moderate to High evidence — multiple RCTs

Pain relief consistently occurs OUTSIDE the targeted area. Treating the thoracic spine can relieve cervical pain. This is global brain-level modulation, not local joint correction.

Clinical implication: Joint-specific structural diagnosis is invalidated by this finding. Technique selection based on presentation phenotype (irritability level, stiffness dominance) is more rational than "finding the dysfunctional segment."

Where the Research Doesn't Fully Translate

The Sham Conundrum

Research finding: Multiple sham-controlled RCTs show equivalent outcomes to real MT.

Any physical touch stimulates A-beta fibers and triggers descending pain modulation. There is no truly inert sham. "Sham" MT is often an active neurophysiological intervention in its own right. This means the specific mechanics of manual therapy may matter even less than the studies suggest — or that the bar for "real" MT is lower than assumed.

Clinical adjustment: Design sessions around optimising contextual variables, not perfecting your technique.

Proxy Measurement Problem

Research finding: Neurophysiological mechanisms are measured via pressure pain thresholds, heart rate variability, skin conductance.

These proxy measures are highly susceptible to psychological state, anxiety, and environmental factors. Direct spinal cord observation is not possible in a living patient.

Clinical adjustment: Patient-reported outcomes (NRS pain score, PSFS activities) are more clinically meaningful than any mechanistic proxy measure in your clinic.

Publication Bias and Short-Term Focus

Research finding: Literature heavily skewed toward immediate and 4-week follow-ups showing positive results. Lower-quality studies report positive effects at higher rates than high-quality RCTs.

Long-term follow-ups consistently show regression to mean. MT's pain relief is transient. The field has a systematic short-termism problem.

Clinical adjustment: Never position MT as a cure. It is a time-limited pain bridge to active loading — always communicate this expectation to patients from session one.

Technique Selection by Presentation

Tier 1 — Strongest Evidence for Short-Term Pain Relief

Maitland Grades I–IV Mobilisation

Rhythmic oscillating passive movement. Grades I–II for highly irritable, pain-dominant presentations. Grades III–IV for stiffness-dominant, low-irritability cases. Robust RCT evidence for short-term pain modulation.

HIGH

HVLA Thrust Manipulation

High-velocity, low-amplitude force at end-range. Best for stiffness-dominant, low-irritability presentations. Requires shared decision-making + vascular history for cervical region. Produces cavitation — clinically irrelevant to the outcome.

HIGH
See full treatment hierarchy (Tier 2 + 3)

Tier 2 — Moderate Evidence

Muscle Energy Technique (MET)

Active isometric contraction (20–30% effort) against clinician resistance, followed by passive stretch. Moderate evidence for short-term range of motion improvement. Good for patients averse to cracking or high-irritability presentations.

MODERATE

Soft Tissue Mobilisation / Massage

Manual manipulation of muscles and connective tissue. Moderate evidence for short-term symptom relief. Permanent structural remodeling: no supporting evidence.

MODERATE

Tier 3 — Conditional / Low Evidence

IASTM (Graston / Tool-Assisted Soft Tissue)

Rigid tools applying controlled mechanical input across tissue. Low-to-moderate evidence for pain reduction. Breaking fascial adhesions: critically low evidence. Use as adjunct to loading only.

LOW

What Doesn't Work

  • MT as standalone treatment for chronic pain (>12 weeks): Effect size disappears without progressive exercise. Patients who receive MT alone relapse faster than those in exercise-integrated programmes.
  • MT framed as structural correction: Telling patients their joints were "put back" or "realigned" creates passive dependence, catastrophising beliefs, and repeat attendance — all documented clinical harms from language, not technique.
  • Extended MT courses without active loading: If sessions aren't enabling progressive tissue loading, the MT is maintaining pain rather than resolving it. Reassess and increase exercise at 6 sessions.

How to Explain MT to Patients Without Causing Harm

Never Say

  • "Your spine is out of alignment"
  • "I'm putting your joint back in place"
  • "I'm breaking up scar tissue"
  • "Your pelvis is rotated"
  • "That crack means the joint released"

Say This Instead

  • "This works like a reset switch for your nervous system"
  • "It sends safe signals from your joint sensors to your brain, turning down pain signals"
  • "It won't fix the underlying problem on its own — the exercises create the lasting change"
  • "Think of it as opening a pain-free window so we can load you properly"

Load Management Around Manual Therapy

The timing of exercise relative to MT sessions is clinically significant. The analgesic window is real — use it strategically:

Immediately (0–90 min post-MT)

Maximum Window

Schedule training or physio exercises here. Pain modulation is active — movement tolerance is at its highest point in the treatment cycle.

During MT Course (Weeks 1–6)

Progressive Loading

MT dosage should decrease as exercise load increases. The goal is making the MT unnecessary — not sustaining pain relief artificially.

Week 6+ (if still needed)

Red Flag — Reassess

MT dependency at this point is a clinical warning. Increase exercise intensity. Consider pain science education. Wean to maximum once per 4 weeks if genuine demand exists.

MT-Specific Discharge Criteria

A patient has been successfully managed when they no longer need manual therapy to function normally — not when they "feel better with treatment":

What the Simple Answer Misses

Contextual healing isn't a bug — it's a feature

Optimising expectation, therapeutic alliance, and mechanism explanation is itself a measurable therapeutic act. A clinician who explains the neurophysiological truth and builds genuine trust will consistently outperform one who sells biomechanical mythology — even if the technique is identical. The contextual variables are the intervention, not noise around it.

The 2020 cervical framework changes pre-manipulation screening

The old vertebral artery extension-rotation test has been formally retired — it is clinically unreliable. There is no single screening test that rules out cervical artery problems. Current standard: comprehensive vascular history, cardiovascular risk profiling, and shared decision-making where the patient is explicitly informed of the rare but serious stroke risk before cervical HVLA. This is a consent issue, not just a clinical one.

Short-term benefit is still clinically valuable — used correctly

The evidence that MT's benefit is short-term and largely matches sham is not an argument to abandon it. Pain that is relieved for 4 weeks — during which progressive loading permanently remodels the tissue and restores confidence in movement — has achieved the clinical goal. The mistake is using MT without the loading component, not using MT at all. The 1–6 week window is the prescription, not a limitation to apologise for.

Technique matters less than communication

Since sham MT achieves equivalent outcomes for most conditions, the measurable difference between therapists is not in their hands — it's in their words. Clinicians who frame treatment around movement, confidence, and progressive loading produce better long-term outcomes. Clinicians who frame treatment around "fixing structural problems" produce passive, dependent patients who attend indefinitely. The biomechanical narrative has documented clinical harms that the technique itself does not.

Key References

2025

Keter et al. — PLoS One Living Systematic Review (62 reviews). The most comprehensive evidence synthesis of manual therapy mechanisms. Biomechanical evidence: critically low. Neurophysiological: low to moderate. Placebo/contextual: high.

2022

Naranjo-Cinto G et al. — RCT. Real MT + Exercise = Sham MT + Exercise for non-specific shoulder pain. Zero between-group differences in pain, disability, or range of motion at any follow-up point.

2021

Lavazza C et al. — BMJ Open. Sham MT = Real MT for back pain. Manipulative techniques showed no statistically or clinically meaningful superiority over sham procedures. The pivotal systematic review on contextual mechanisms.

2020

IFOMPT Cervical Framework. International standard for pre-manipulation cervical vascular screening. Formally retired the extension-rotation test; established shared decision-making as the required standard before cervical HVLA.

2018

Bialosky JE et al. — JOSPT update. Updated neurophysiological cascade model. Spinal-mediated pain reduction confirmed via indirect measures; brain activation confirmed via fMRI studies.

2012/13

Cramer GD et al. — MRI studies. Confirmed joint gapping and gas bubble formation (cavitation) during HVLA. Established that the crack is real — but showed no clinical outcome correlation with whether cavitation occurs.

2009

Bialosky JE et al. — Manual Therapy. Foundational neurophysiological cascade model. First comprehensive framework mapping peripheral, spinal, and brain-level mechanisms of manual therapy analgesia.

Overall Conviction: MODERATE

What would change this: A multi-arm sham-controlled RCT (N>500) with simultaneous brain imaging showing that targeted HVLA activates distinct brain pain-dampening circuits not activated by sham touch, with outcomes superior at 12-month follow-up — would elevate biomechanical mechanism conviction from critically low to moderate.

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Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

69 Mixed evidence
80–100Strong evidence
60–79Mixed but supportive ◀
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

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The Verdict is built by the same team behind Precision Metrics — a physique and health coaching practice with 300+ clients coached. Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT and Luke Holbrook lead the coaching.

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