A Description Of Osteopathic Treatment

What Is Osteopathic Treatment?

Osteopathic treatment is a form of manual medicine first applied by Dr. Still and further developed by the osteopathic profession. It is used by DOs and properly trained MDs to treat structural restrictions (somatic dysfunction) and improve the level of health in their patients.

Osteopathic treatment has gone by various names: Osteopathic Adjustment, Osteopathic Manipulative Therapy, Osteopathic Manual Treatment, Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment, Osteopathic Manual Medicine, etc.

The level a treatment takes place on depends on a number of factors, among them, the level of skill, perception and experience of the physician. Some treatments are aimed primary at joints, others at membranes or fluids; still others at even deeper levels.

What makes a certain form of manual medicine osteopathic is not just the technique, but also the way in which it is applied, that is, according to osteopathic philosophy.

How Does It Work?

Osteopathic treatment works by engaging the innate forces of the body to do the work and preferably, to do it in a fashion in which the body is already trying to treat. By applying seemingly innocuous forces in a very precise manner, the bodies self-treatment can be enhanced to release strains and patterns imprinted on the body from trauma and stresses of life.

Self Treatment Patterns

There have always been a number of methods used to classify osteopathic treatment. The easiest way to understand these approaches is to look at the way in which the body treats itself.

For sake of simplicity, we use a classic model dealing with motion of one bone with respect to another, though it is truly much more complicated than this.

Fig. 1 “Normal” position of bones

Fig.2 Altered position from trauma

  1. Indirect (Exaggeration of the problem)
  2. Fig. 3 Indirect forces applied to altered anatomy.


    In an indirect approach the pathologic position of the disturbed areas is exaggerated until a change occurs.

  3. Direct
  4. Fig. 4 Indirect forces applied to altered anatomy.


    In a direct approach the pathologic position of the disturbed areas is reduced or taken directly towards their “normal” position until a change occurs.

  5. Disengagement
  6. Fig. 5 Disengaging forces applied to altered anatomy.


    In disengagement the disturbed areas are separated and the tension adjusted until a change occurs.

  7. Opposite Physiological Motion
  8. .

    Fig. 6 Forces applied appear opposite to a physiologic approach


    In this approach one part is positioned as if an indirect approach and the other as if a direct approach.

  9. Molding
  10. Fig. 7 “Normal” squamous bone.


    Fig. 8 “Warped” squamous bone.



    Fig. 9 Treatment forces app;ied by the body remolding the bone from inside the head.


    Molding is useful for treating “warped” bones such as the thin bones of the head deformed from physical trauma. The forces essentially remold the shape of the bone.

  11. Other

  12. There are a number of other approaches, which affect the body on deeper levels that are very uncommonn or too complex to discuss here.

Involved Forces

The above treatment methods can be applied with different types of forces

These can be forces that are applied externally or they can be patient generated forces (the body always treats itself).

Tissue Levels

In addition, an individual treatment approach can be applied to different tissues or different levels of function of the body.

Treatment Techniques

Commonly used treatment techniques are as follows:

All this being said, it is a misnomer to think that there are discrete structural “lesions” or problems in the body. Any problem anywhere in the body affects the whole and is a whole body problem. That is, the body is structurally one unit and becomes dysfunctional as a whole unit, not individual parts. As such, treatment is approached with this idea in mind and the treatment technique must be appropriately applied.







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