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Massage for
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Massage therapy eases the symptoms of carpal tunnel syndrome and increases grip
strength, according to a recent study.
“Carpal tunnel syndrome symptoms
are lessened following massage therapy” was conducted by staff at the Touch
Research Institutes at the University of Miami School of Medicine in Miami,
Florida.
Symptoms of carpal tunnel
syndrome include pain, tingling, burning and numbness of the hand. Sixteen
people diagnosed with this syndrome participated in the study. All of them held
jobs involving heavy word processing or computer work.
Subjects were randomly assigned
to either the standard-treatment control group or the massage-therapy group.
Those in the massage group received one massage per week on the affected arm for
four weeks. They were also instructed in self-massage, which they were to
perform each night before bed.
The massage routine consisted of
stroking of moderate pressure from the fingertips to the elbow. A massage and
pain log was kept by subjects in the massage group. In the log, participants
recorded the times at which they began and ended self-massage, as well as their
levels of pain on a scale from zero to 10.
Subjects in the control group
received no intervention, but were taught the massage routine after the study
ended.
Physicians evaluated
participants’ carpal tunnel symptoms, such as tingling, numbness, pain and
strength, at the beginning and end of the four-week study. The Tinel sign, which
tests to see if light tapping of the affected area elicits pain or tingling, was
also used at the start and finish of the study. Physicians used the Phalen Test
at the beginning and end of the study as well. The Phalen Test involves flexing
of the wrists to see if numbness or tingling occurs.
A nerve conduction test was also
performed at the start and finish of the study. This involved stimulation of the
median sensory nerves through electrodes placed on each subject’s index finger
and wrist. Peak sensory latencies were recorded to test for nerve compression at
the carpal tunnel. Median peak latency was the primary outcome measure.
Assessments were also made before
and after the massage sessions on the first and last days of the study,
including the Perceived Grip Strength Scale; VITAS, a pain assessment using a
visual analogue scale; the state anxiety inventory; and the Profile of Mood
States.
Results of the study showed that
the subjects in the massage group had significantly less pain and reduced carpal
tunnel symptoms, as well as shorter median peak latencies and increased grip
strength.
“Functional activity also
improved as noted in reduced pain and increased grip strength in the massage
therapy group, both immediately after the first and last massage therapy
sessions and by the end of the study,” state the study’s authors. “Finally, the
massage therapy group reported lower anxiety and depressed mood levels both
immediately after the first and last sessions and by the end of the study.”
—Source:
Touch Research Institutes at the University of Miami School of Medicine in
Miami, Florida. Authors: Tiffany Field, PhD; Miguel Diego; Christy Cullen;
Kristin Hartshorn; Alan Gruskin; Maria Hernandez-Reif, PhD; and William
Sunshine. Originally published in the Journal of Bodywork and Movement
Therapies, 2004, Vol. 8, pp. 9-14.
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