You may notice that you hear a click or feel movement in your spine later on the same day after the Torque Release adjustment. Your spinal corrections do not stop once you get off the table.
This low-force chiropractic adjusting method allows the nervous system to better integrate and understand new corrective information and to process it throughout the spinal cord and brain. The Integrator reproduces the thrust and movement components of the classic chiropractic method of adjusting by hand, at a speed of 1/10,000th of a second. Torque Release bases its technique on gentle touch and light thrusting by using a hand-held instrument called an Integrator. Unlike the expected “bone popping” adjustments portrayed in the popular media, Torque Release is a “non-manipulative” adjustment, which means there is no popping or twisting required. Chad McMahan uses a unique chiropractic spinal analysis and adjusting method, called the Torque Release Technique.