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Massage for Long-Term
Pain
Massage significantly improved self-rated health,
mental energy and muscle pain in people with chronic musculoskeletal pain,
according to a recent study.
“A Randomized Clinical Trial of
the Treatment Effects of Massage Compared to Relaxation Tape Recordings on
Diffuse Long-Term Pain” was conducted by staff at the Uppsala University
Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, in Uppsala, Sweden.
One-hundred-seventeen subjects
with long-term, diffuse (spread out) musculoskeletal pain participated in the
study. Each subject had pain that had lasted for at least three months and was
not caused by a specific disease or condition.
Participants were randomized to
either a massage or relaxation group. Subjects in the massage group received
anywhere from six to 10 massages, each lasting 30 minutes. Subjects received the
massages one to three times per week. Participants received an average of seven
massages. One person administered all massages, and each session was adjusted to
meet subjects’ individual pain thresholds.
Subjects in the relaxation group
listened to a relaxation tape twice a week for five weeks. The tape instructed
them to tense and relax the muscle groups and breathe slowly and regularly.
Questionnaires regarding the
subjects’ age, gender, smoking habits, country of birth, marital status and
profession were filled out before, immediately after and three months following
the study. A self-rated health questionnaire and rating scales for mental energy
and muscle pain were also administered at these times.
Results of the study showed that,
during treatment, there was a significant improvement in self-rated health,
mental energy and muscle pain for subjects in the massage group as compared to
those in the relaxation group.
“For all three outcome measures,
massage was significantly more effective during treatment, even after
controlling for other possible factors,” state the study’s authors.
However, at the three-month
follow-up evaluation these improved scores had reverted back to their initial
levels.
“This lack of long-term benefits
could be due to the short treatment period or treatments such as these do not
address the underlying causes of pain,” state the study’s authors. “Future
studies of long-term pain should include longer treatment periods and
post-treatment follow-up."
—Source: Uppsala
University Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, in Uppsala, Sweden.
Authors: Dan Hasson, Bengt Arentz, Lena Jelveus and Bo Edelstam. Originally
published in Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 2004, Vol. 73, pp. 17-24.
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