Osteoarthritis Pain Less with Massage Therapy
< Dec.
13, 2006 > -- According to a study published
in the Archives of Internal
Medicine, massage therapy may do more than
just relax your body: It also appears to reduce
pain and improve function in people suffering from
osteoarthritis of the knee.
"This is a very happy outcome,
but it is a pilot study in that the duration is short
and the population is small," says senior author
Dr. David Katz, associate adjunct professor of public
health and director of the Prevention Research Center
at Yale University School of Medicine.
"We think that the primary role
for massage therapy will be to reduce dependence
on pharmacotherapy, rather than replace it outright,
and to delay any functional decline rather than reverse
the disease. So, the question then becomes, what
is the bang for the buck?" Dr. Katz says.
Dr. Katz and his colleagues are
now researching the cost of massage, in the hopes
of convincing insurance companies that it can take
its place as a legitimate therapy for this disease.
The American
Massage Therapy Association states that
massage therapy use in hospitals has increased
by 30 percent in the last two years. Of the hospitals
that have massage therapy programs, 71 percent
indicate they offer massage therapy for patient
stress management and comfort while more than two-thirds
(67 percent) utilize massage therapy for pain management.
Fifty-two percent say they provide massage for
cancer patients and 67 percent offer massage to
their staff for stress management.
Osteoarthritis is caused by a
progressive degeneration of bone cartilage and is
the most common type of arthritis in the United States.
The condition affects some 21 million people and
is associated with aging.
Conventional treatments include
pain medication, exercise, hot and cold therapy,
corticosteroid injections, and surgery.
The medications used for osteoarthritis,
however, are problematic. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory
drugs (NSAIDs), such as aspirin, can cause serious
gastrointestinal side effects. The cox-2 inhibitors
such as Vioxx® that were developed to bypass
those side effects are now known to cause cardiovascular
problems, and some, including Vioxx, have been taken
off the market.
While massage has been shown to
relieve chronic lower back pain and musculoskeletal
disorders, there has been no research on massage
to help osteoarthritis sufferers. At least until
now.
For this study, 68 adults with
osteoarthritis of the knee were randomly assigned
to receive either standard Swedish massage therapy
or to a wait-list control group that started massage
eight weeks after the first group. All participants
were encouraged to continue with their previous treatments
and medications.
Individuals in the massage group
received a one-hour Swedish massage twice a week
for four weeks, then once a week for the following
four weeks.
After the first eight weeks, participants
receiving massage had improved flexibility and range
of motion and reduced pain.
Those in the control group showed
no changes in symptoms until they, too, started receiving
massage. Then, during weeks nine through 16, they
experienced benefits similar to the first group.
Interestingly, the benefits did
not go away even when the massages were stopped.
"The very significant therapeutic
response over eight weeks of therapy persisted eight
weeks later," Dr. Katz says. There are two possible
explanations for the improvements.
In the immediate time frame, Dr.
Katz explains, "sensory input [the massage] competes
with pain input in the spinal cord, travels faster,
and blocks pain symptoms."
Massage may also enhance blood
flow to the region affected by osteoarthritis. "Since
the acute pain of osteoarthritis is related to inflammation,
increased perfusion brings an influx of cells to
clean out the debris and facilitates, to whatever
extent possible, bone and cartilage remodeling," Dr.
Katz explains.
More studies are needed before
doctors, patients, and insurance companies can be
persuaded to accept this as common practice, he says.
"The end game would be that this
would be something people with osteoarthritis would
be able to access routinely," Dr. Katz says. "We
ultimately want to change the standard of practice,
but we don't do that with one study."
Always consult your physician
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