Massage Eases Lower-Back Pain and Increases Range of
Motion
Adults with chronic
low-back pain found relief from massage therapy,
according to a research study. Massage eased pain,
reduced depression and anxiety, and improved sleep
and range of motion. The study, "Lower Back Pain is
Reduced and Range of Motion Increased After Massage
Therapy," was completed in January 2000 by the Touch
Research Institute in conjunction with the
University of Miami School of Medicine and Iris
Burman of Educating Hands, and was first published
in the International Journal of Neuroscience.
Twenty-four adults
who had experienced low-back pain for at least six
months were randomly assigned to either a massage
therapy group or a relaxation therapy group.
The massage therapy
group received twice-weekly, 30-minute massages for
five weeks. Starting in the prone position, the
following techniques were used: kneading and
pressing the back muscles, stroking both sides of
the spine and hips, gliding strokes to the legs, and
kneading and pressing the thighs. Continuing in the
supine position, participants received: gliding
strokes to the neck and abdomen, kneading of the
rectus and oblique muscles that help bend the trunk
of the body forward, stroking of the legs, kneading
of the anterior thighs, flexing of the thighs and
knees, and gentle pulling on both legs.
Those in the
relaxation group were instructed in progressive
muscle relaxation techniques to tense and relax
muscles in the feet, calves, thighs, hands, arms,
back and face. Participants performed these
exercises at home twice weekly for 30 minutes.
Assessments taken
before and after the first and last sessions
included: the Profile of Mood States Depression
Scale to rate depression; the State Anxiety
Inventory to rate feelings at the present moment;
the McGill Pain Questionnaire to measure pain; the
Visual Analogue Scale to measure present level of
pain; the Range of Motion Measures test to rate the
level of ability to bend; a Symptom Checklist-90
Revised to measure moods; a sleep scale to measure
quality of sleep; and urine samples to measure
levels of the stress hormone cortisol, serotonin and
catecholamines (amino acid derivatives that affect
the nervous system, cardiovascular system, metabolic
rate, temperature and muscles).
Results showed that
both groups experienced a decrease in stress and
long-term pain, but only the massage group
experienced less pain directly after the session,
fewer depressive symptoms, better sleep, improved
range of motion and an increase in serotonin and the
catecholamine dopamine biochemical levels.
"The findings from
the present study are compelling and if the effects
can be replicated and persist, these data suggest
that massage therapy effectively reduces pain,
positively impacts on the biochemical system, and
attenuates psychological symptoms associated with
lower back pain," the study authors wrote.
The authors also
wrote that future studies might "examine the impact
of massage therapy on job productivity and
absenteeism for individuals with chronic low back
problems."
Source: Touch
Research Institute. Originally reported in
International Journal of Neuroscience, 2001, Vol.
106, pp. 131-145.
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