Archive for the ‘Massage Benefits’ Category

Integrative Medicine: Human touch helps healing

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Integrative medicine: Human touch helps healing

By DRS. KAY JUDGE AND MAXINE BARISH-WREDEN – McClatchy Newspapers

Of our five senses, touch is the only one that is essential to life. Studies on premature babies have shown a link between holding the babies and better survival rates. Touch has also been linked to many other health benefits – from decreased pain to increased immunity, enhanced alertness and improved performance.

Three new studies on massage reinforce the importance of touch to our lifelong health and well-being:

-Touch may help alleviate symptoms of depression, according to a March study in the American Journal of Psychiatry. The study reviewed 17 trials involving almost 800 people, comparing massage therapy with other approaches, including herbs, rest or no treatment.

The researchers hypothesized that touch may help reduce depression by inducing relaxation, reducing stress, building an alliance between the therapist and patient, and releasing the feel-good hormone oxytocin.

-Massage may help bereaved people. A study published in the April issue of the Journal of Clinical Nursing looked at 18 people who recently had lost a relative to cancer. Hand or foot massage was performed once a week for eight weeks, and it was found that massage helped people deal with the grief and move forward in their lives.

-Massage can reduce anxiety. A recent study on 68 patients published in the journal Depression and Anxiety showed that patients had half the symptoms of anxiety and stress three months after getting a series of 10 hour-long massages. This is one of the first studies to look at the benefits of massage on generalized anxiety disorder. (Surprisingly, it was found that there was an equal relaxation response when the patients listened to soothing music.)

Amid all these health benefits, it is interesting that in studies evaluating the frequency of touch in various countries, the United States and Britain had the least amount of touch in human interactions. We do not live in a society that celebrates touch.

Further, social isolation, and therefore touch isolation, is most likely to occur in the groups that can derive the most health benefits – the sick and the elderly.

So if you or a loved one faces depression or illness, consider the healing power of touch – whether in the form of a hug or a massage. It may be an important step in the healing journey.

(Drs. Kay Judge and Maxine Barish-Wreden are medical directors of Sutter Downtown Integrative Medicine program in Sacramento, Calif. Have a question related to alternative medicine? E-mail adrenaline@sacbee.com.)

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac.Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic,Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, &China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

Alzheimer’s Patients Lose Muscle Mass

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

As the U.S. population ages, and as research shows the benefits of massage therapy to seniors, massage for the elderly may grow as a specialty. New research shows Alzheimer’s patients may lose muscle mass, according to a report in the April issue of Archives of Neurology.

Lean mass, the weight of an individual’s bones, muscles and organs without body fat, appears to decline among Alzheimer’s patients. These decreases may be associated with declines in brain volume and function, the researchers noted in a press release.

Unintended weight loss often occurs among individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and frequently begins prior to memory loss or other cognitive symptoms, according to background information in the article. This weight loss is associated with the severity of dementia and with faster progression of Alzheimer’s disease.

“Although obesity in midlife is a risk factor for developing dementia, overweight and obesity in late life are associated with lower dementia risk,” the University of Kansas School of Medicine researchers write.

The findings suggest that lean mass, as opposed to body mass index or other measures of overall weight or fat levels, may be a more sensitive measure of the changes in body composition associated with dementia.

Source: MassageMag.com

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing ZhouM.D.O.M., L.Ac.Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic,Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, &China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

Alternative remedy use common among infertile

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – A substantial number of American couples are looking beyond just state-of-the-art fertility treatments to therapies dating back centuries in hopes of improving their chances of conceiving a baby, according to new research.

More than a quarter of northern California couples followed in a study sought help from acupuncture, herbal therapy and massage-often as a complement to conventional conception strategies such as in vitro fertilization. Rates were especially high among wealthy, older couples.

“We suggest that couples struggling to achieve pregnancy are more likely to seek out any treatment that offers hope,” Dr. James Smith of the University of California, San Francisco, who led the study, told Reuters Health in an email.

The research is the first in the U.S. to quantify the use of complementary and alternative medicine for infertility-a problem that afflicts 7 to 17 percent of American couples, note the researchers in the journal Fertility and Sterility. Overall, studies have shown that up to 40 percent of Americans use such remedies for all conditions.

As a first step toward understanding what motivates a couple’s decision to pursue alternative remedies, Smith and his team recruited 428 couples from eight reproductive clinics and followed them via questionnaires and interviews over the next 18 months.

During this period, 29 percent of the couples reported using some form of complementary and alternative medicine: 22 percent underwent acupuncture, 17 percent took herbal therapy, 5 percent had body work such as chiropractic or massage, and 1 percent tried meditation.

With every five-year increase in the woman’s age, the chances of her and her partner pursuing at least one of these strategies rose by about 29 percent, even after accounting for factors such as having previous children and the use of other infertility treatments.

Couples earning more than $200,000 were nearly three times more likely to seek alternative remedies than were those with combined incomes less than $100,000.

In another study, not yet published, Smith and his colleagues calculated the total out-of-pocket infertility costs for couples using in vitro fertilization at $16,550. A visit to the acupuncturist runs about $100, added Smith.

“Couples with higher incomes were more likely to have the financial resources to seek out” complementary and alternative remedies, said Smith, emphasizing the relevance of “complementary” over “alternative” in this case.

Perhaps less surprising, couples failing to achieve pregnancy had a nearly two and a half-fold increased chance of using such remedies compared to those successfully conceiving, and partners that had a positive attitude about the effectiveness of alternative treatments were 85 percent more likely to try it.

The authors say the study’s design may limit whether their findings can be generalized to the larger population, because the couples were self-selected and there were low numbers of certain racial and ethnic groups. And, Smith said, the study was not designed to test whether such treatments are effective.

SOURCE: Fertility and Sterility, online March 24, 2010.

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac.Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic,Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, &China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture

Massage may help lift depression

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

The authors of the review, however, acknowledge difficulties with research on the effects of massage, including the fact that it’s impossible to “blind” study participants or care providers to whether a person is receiving massage or a comparison treatment.

Nevertheless, they say there is “good evidence to suggest that massage therapy is an effective treatment of depression.”

Depression is a huge public health problem, and treatment is often inadequate, Dr. Wen-Hsuan Hou of I-Shou University in Kaohsiung, Taiwan and colleagues note in their report.

While massage can ease stress and tension and may have emotional benefits, the use of massage therapy in depressed patients is “controversial,” the investigators note, and “there is no qualitative review of the treatment effect of massage therapy in depressed patients.”

To investigate further, they searched for randomized controlled trials of massage therapy in depressed patients. They identified 17 studies including 786 people in all. In 13 of the trials, massage therapy was compared to another active treatment such as Chinese herbs, relaxation exercises, or rest, while four compared massage to a “no treatment” control group. Investigators also used a range of methods for evaluating mood and depression in study participants.

Overall, the studies, which were of “moderate” quality, showed that massage therapy had “potentially significant effects” in alleviating symptoms of depression, the researchers report in the American Journal of Psychiatry.

It’s not clear from the analysis, they emphasize, whether a person would need to undergo regular massage therapy for benefits to persist.

There are a number of ways through which massage could help people with depression, the researchers note, for example, by reducing stress and inducing relaxation; building an “alliance” between the therapist and patient; and by causing the body to release the “trust hormone” oxytocin.

“Further well-designed and longer follow-up studies, including accurate outcome measures, are needed,” they conclude.

SOURCE: Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, online March 23, 2010.

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing ZhouM.D.O.M., L.Ac.Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic,Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, &China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

Massage Can Alleviate Lower Back Pain

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Many back pain sufferers seek to alleviate their symptoms with massage, but, according to The German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care, only some forms of massage therapy are actually beneficial in reducing or eliminating pain. “Research suggests that classic massage, Thai massage and acupressure can relieve low back pain that has lasted longer than several weeks,” says Professor Peter Sawicki, the Institute’s Director. Back pain, which is rarely caused by a more serious health problem, often gets better on its own. And, while massage therapy can help patients cope with symptoms, research indicates that the most pain relief is gained when patients combine massage with other modalities such as exercise or stretching.

Source: The German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing ZhouM.D.O.M., L.Ac.Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic,Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, &China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

Relief for your back is at hand

Monday, February 15th, 2010
By Linda J. Buch and Kristen Browning-Blas
The Denver Post

(The Denver Post)

Your back hurts. Is it because of tightened muscles, thickened connective tissue or blocked energy? Depends on whom you ask, but if you seek out alternatives to traditional Western medical treatment, you will be in good company. About four in 10 adults (and one in nine children) use some form of what the government calls complementary and alternative medicine (CAM).

Through its Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, the National Institutes of Health studies a wide variety of nontraditional and non-Western treatments, including herbs and supplements, energy medicine, massage and other manipulative, body-based practices.

The center has found that American adults are most likely to seek out alternative treatments for musculoskeletal problems such as back, neck or joint pain. For detailed information on hundreds of treatments and topics, go to nccam.nih.gov. Here’s a sampling of hands-on treatments in Denver:

Massage

An experienced certified massage therapist is trained to deal with muscle and tissue dysfunction through hands-on soft-tissue manipulation that both relaxes and improves blood flow to the affected area and the body as a whole.

Massage can be effective preventive medicine, say therapists. Tess Gallegos, a Denver massage and skin-care specialist, says massage also improves posture and body mechanics.

“The goal of a massage therapist is for the client to leave with an understanding of back pain and to feel more in control,” says Gallegos. “Massage is not just relaxing, it can actually change the structure of the body and get to the bottom of the cause of the pain.”

Swedish massage specialist Stefan Paulsson explains that tight muscles pull on the skeleton where the muscle is attached. The body then compensates for the short, tight muscle in another part of the body, causing pain.

“A contracted muscle has poor blood flow; relaxing it improves blood flow,” says Paulsson, who owns Back In Shape in the Commons Park neighborhood downtown. “Keep soft tissue soft, relaxed and with good blood flow, and fewer problems arise.”

Rolfing.

Developed by Ph.D. biochemist Ida P. Rolf more than 60 years ago, Rolfing is the process of examining and reorganizing the connective tissues that envelop the entire body. “Connective tissue provides support for the entire body,” says Marekah Stewart, a certified advanced Rolfer. “It encases all of the body’s systems — muscle, organs, bones — all of them.”

When you combine gravity with any illness or trauma (physical or emotional) the connective tissue thickens, shortens and becomes “stuck,” and we begin to compensate, says Stewart.

The head may pull forward, the shoulders may become rounded, and imbalances in the hips and pelvic girdle may occur. Because of its plasticity, connective tissue responds to warmth and pressure, so Rolfers manually free up the connective tissue over a series of 10 sessions.

“If one area is affected, others are impacted, the ultimate goal being to bring the head, shoulders, thorax, pelvis and legs back to a more vertical alignment,” says Stewart. “Rolfing can provide more freedom of movement, function, flexibility, and the sense of being integrated, giving one more energy and balance.”

Acupuncture

Practiced in China and throughout Asia for thousands of years, acupuncture stimulates specific points on the body, most commonly through thin metal needles inserted into the skin. The acupuncture points are on pathways, called meridians, along which the life force (qi) flows, and stimulating them is thought to remove blockages in the flow of qi.

While the National Institutes of Health places it in the complementary and alternative medicine category, acupuncture is one of the most-studied alternative practices. The American Pain Society and the American College of Physicians say doctors should consider acupuncture, among other complementary and alternative therapies, for patients with chronic low-back pain that does not respond to conventional treatment.

A clinical trial reported in May 2009 that actual acupuncture and simulated acupuncture were equally effective — and both were more effective than conventional treatment — for relieving chronic low-back pain, says the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

Patty Wang and Henry Cao have been practicing acupuncture in Colorado for 15 years, since they moved here from China, where Wang practiced acupuncture and Cao was an orthopedic surgeon. In their Denver practice, Wang does most of the acupuncture, and her husband, Cao, works with herbs and uses his surgical knowledge to diagnose and prescribe exercises.

“Acupuncture can help relax soft tissue from a muscle spasm, muscle imbalance, arthritis, or herniated disk, but cannot restore the lost cartilage due to arthritis or repair a herniated disk,” says Cao.

Reiki

Based on the idea of a universal energy that can support the body’s healing abilities, Reiki is a Japanese practice that gained popularity in the United States in the 1930s. Pronounced RAY-kee, the word comes from the Japanese words rei, or universal, and ki, life energy. Practitioners place their hands lightly on or above the client’s body, in order to channel that energy and facilitate healing.

The National Institutes of Health includes Reiki in the complementary and alternative medicine category, and is funding studies on its usefulness in treating symptoms of advanced AIDS, prostate cancer, and nerve pain and cardiovascular risk in people with Type 2 diabetes. A study published in 2008 found that neither direct nor distant Reiki affected the pain of fibromyalgia.

Although not licensed or regulated, Reiki training has three levels, taught by a master, a practitioner who has reached the highest level.

Reiki master Regan Peschel says in the case of back pain, energy blockages could contribute to the injury, she says.

“With physical pain, half the time is spent sending healing energy to that spot,” says Peschel, who believes we all have the ability to connect with healing energy and to self-heal.

Yoga

“There is a misconception that ‘yoga’ only means get on a mat and be a pretzel,” says Lisa Eller Davis, a Denver yoga teacher and Reiki master. People in pain are often afraid, she says, and stress from that pain makes the pain worse.

“First I use breathing and mind/body awareness to calm the fear,” says Eller Davis. “Breathing oxygenates the body and relieves tension.” Gentle yoga postures and movements — some as simple as changing the position of the head and neck — open the mind and calm the body, she says.

Then, people can begin coordinating body postures with breathing techniques. “Body follows mind, and mind follows breath,” says Eller Davis.

In addition to breathing and relaxation techniques, yoga can be practiced seated, standing and reclining.

“There is a yoga for any body,” Eller Davis says. “With some back injuries, physical yoga movements are not the best place to start; the person should be evaluated by a physician before beginning any yoga program.”

Yoga can adapt, align, strengthen and stretch limbs, and release tension in the head, neck and shoulders, all of which help in the healing process.

Exercise/strength training with Pilates

Personal trainer David Bartlett asks clients to perform exercises like rollups and un-weighted squats. He watches for moves that cause the pain to kick in.

By using strength-training techniques, while challenging balance on a wobble board, FitBall, BOSU, or Coreboard, Bartlett’s clients have reduced or even eliminated pain, he says.

“The goal is the fluid integration of range of motion, speed, length of lever and proper breathing,” Bartlett says. “When people can do this with reduced or no pain, their confidence, co-ordination, and balance all improve as well.”

He says there’s more to developing back strength than “core work” — the pelvic floor muscles, back and abdominals must be strengthened without stressing the area of the back that is under duress.

“I get the best results when strength or resistance training is combined with Pilates, using primarily Polestar Pilates principles and Balanced Body equipment,” he explains. “Pilates strengthens, tones, elongates, and stretches all the muscles in the body — some all at the same time.”

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

Back killing you? Try kyphoplasty

Thursday, January 28th, 2010
Greenport doctor Frank Adipietro injects surgical cement into the damaged vertebrae of an 87-year-old woman suffering from chronic back pain for years. The procedure, called kyphoplasty, was recently criticized by the New England Journal of Medicine.

A few weeks ago, Marian Geoghan’s back started killing her.

The 87-year-old resident of Peconic Landing in Greenport said she’d suffered from back pain on and off for years, but only recently did it take a turn for the worse. She wasn’t sure what was causing it, but she knew she didn’t want to go through any major surgery.

She also didn’t want to take measures such as massage or acupuncture that could be too conservative to ease her chronic pain. Ms. Geoghan said she had learned that lesson about three years ago, when she let a fractured rib heal on its own.

“I was laid up for three months in the summertime,” she said. “There wasn’t much I could do for it other than painkillers and rest.”

Her solution this time around was to see Dr. Frank Adipietro, interventional pain management specialist at Eastern Long Island Hospital in Greenport. He recommended that Ms. Geoghan go through a minimally invasive surgical procedure for spinal bone fractures called balloon kyphoplasty.

“This lady has a history of compression fractures,” he said before the surgery last Friday. “Right now, she has one that has been troubling her for weeks, and it’s been very painful.”

‘We can take a patient who has been in complete pain and get her right back on her feet.’ Dr. Frank Adipietro, Eastern Long Island HospitalOsteoporosis causes more than 700,000 spinal fractures each year in the U.S., more than twice the annual number of hip fractures, according to the National Osteoporosis Foundation. Because of the complexity of back pain, Dr. Adipietro added, about two-thirds of these fractures go undiagnosed or untreated. But once the correct diagnosis is made, kyphoplasty can take away back pain almost immediately, the doctor said.

“This is a situation where we can take a patient who has been in complete pain and get her right back on her feet within 24 hours and living a regular lifestyle, which is the whole key to these pain management procedures,” he said. Ms. Geoghan “has a new fracture which has not been healing on its own, in fact it’s getting worse. She’s the perfect candidate for this type of procedure.”

During the 20-minute surgery — which requires only a light sedative for the patient — cement is injected into the fractured bone through tiny tubes while balloons open up tiny cavities in the bone that the cement can go into safely, he said.

“With other techniques, where you don’t use a balloon, the cement spreads straight into the bone and can sometimes go in a haphazard way,” Dr. Adipietro said. “And what causes the pain is the microfractures of the bone. The cement takes about an hour to cure, then it stabilizes the fractures in the bone and the pain goes away.”

Patients who sign up for kyphoplasty range from the elderly to the “16-year-old cheerleader who herniated a disk to the long distance runner in his 20s to people in car accidents,” Dr. Adipietro said. “Anyone who needs pain management.”

Kyphoplasty — and a similar procedure called vertebroplasty, which is also offered at Eastern Long Island Hospital — recently came under fire from a clinical study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The study found a lack of data to support the claim that the procedure will result in an “immediate and sustained reduction in pain.”

“Not only is the short-term efficacy of vertebroplasty unproven,” the Journal reported, “but there are also several uncontrolled studies suggesting that vertebroplasty may increase the risk of subsequent vertebral fractures, particularly in vertebrae that are adjacent to treated levels, and sometimes after cement has leaked into the adjacent disks.”

Dr. Adipietro called the study, which was reported in The New York Times, “unfortunate.”

“Here’s all these people with broken bones, and they don’t know what to do,” he said. “What can happen after the procedure is that the pain caused by the bone fracture goes away but different types of pain associated with standard back issues then begin to pop up. Researchers obviously picked this topic and said, ‘OK, does this work better than conservative measures?’ Well, those of us who do the procedure almost on a daily or weekly basis can tell you that we have patients out there that would be in chronic pain if this procedure were not done.”

Minimally invasive surgery is always better than the old methods of “opening the back up” to fix a fractured bone, Dr. Adipietro added.

“Sometimes people would be in body casts for three to six months,” he said.

In Dr. Adipietro’s view, having the procedure done when a person is already in chronic pain can’t hurt — because it isn’t going to get worse after the quick and simple operation, he said.

Two days after her operation, Ms. Geoghan said that she wasn’t quite comfortable yet but she wasn’t in as much pain as she had been three weeks before.

“It’s day by day,” she said. “Today is better than the day before. Hopefully by the end of the week I’ll feel much better.”

SOURCE: The Suffolk Times

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

Physiotherapy Lowers Risk of Lymphedema

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Physiotherapy may prevent lymphedema after breast cancer surgery that involves dissection of axillary lymph nodes, researchers say.

Significantly fewer women developed the condition when they were given physiotherapy, compared with women who only received education on preventing the condition, Maria Torres Lacomba, MD, of Alcala de Henares University in Madrid, and colleagues reported online in BMJ.

Lymphedema results from surgery or radiotherapy for breast cancer and is the most important chronic complication after dissection of the axillary lymph nodes, the researchers said. It impairs lymph drainage from the arm, resulting from an imbalance between filtration and resorption.

To determine the effectiveness of early physiotherapy in reducing the risk of lymphedema, the researchers assessed 120 women who’d had breast surgery involving dissection of axillary lymph nodes between May 2005 and June 2007 at Asturias Hospital in Madrid.

The early physiotherapy group was treated by a physiotherapist with a program that included manual lymph drainage, massage of scar tissue, and shoulder exercises, as well as an educational component.

The control group received only the educational material, which discussed the condition and how to prevent it through shoulder exercises.

All patients were followed for a year.

A total of 16% of the women developed secondary lymphedema: 25% of those in the control group versus 7% in the intervention group (P=0.01).

That translated to a 72% decreased risk of lymphedema (HR 0.28, 95% CI 0.10 to 0.79).

By the 12-month follow-up visit, the volume ratio between arms had increased in both groups.

In the control group, the affected arm was on average 5.1% greater in volume than the unaffected arm, whereas in the intervention group the affected arm was on average 1.6% greater than the unaffected arm (P=0.0065).

In a survival analysis, secondary lymphedema was diagnosed four times earlier in the control group than in the intervention group (HR 0.26, 95% CI 0.09 to 0.79, P=0.01).

The manual lymph drainage in this study involved gently massaging the area to improve lymph circulation, which improves the removal of interstitial fluid.

“We think that the implementation of manual lymph drainage after surgery for breast cancer in the early physiotherapy group could have contributed to the better results in that group,” the researchers wrote.

They noted that the study was limited by a short duration of follow-up, by the fact that it was limited to one hospital, and by a definition of lymphedema in which measurement errors could have been significant.

The study also was not powered to examine subgroups of patients. Patients who developed lymphedema were more likely to be overweight, to have had more lymph nodes removed, and to have developed postoperative complications regardless of assignment to physiotherapy or control.

Even so, the researchers concluded that early physiotherapy “could help prevent and reduce secondary lymphedema in patients after breast cancer surgery involving dissection of axillary lymph nodes, at least for one year after surgery.”

Further studies are needed, they wrote, “to clarify whether early physiotherapy after breast cancer surgery can remain effective in preventing secondary lymphedema in the longer term.”

In an accompanying editorial, Andrea Cheville, MD, of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., wrote that “several factors should be considered when generalizing the results to clinical practice.”

Cheville noted that physiotherapy can vary depending on therapists’ training, and the study couldn’t determine which component of the intervention — manual lymph drainage, massage of the scar, shoulder exercises, and education — had the most significant effect on outcomes.

She also noted that the study was limited to one year, so “we do not know if the intervention prevented or simply delayed lymphedema.”

Still, Cheville wrote that the “limited but compelling evidence supports the usefulness of physiotherapy after surgical clearance of the axillary lymph nodes to control pain, enhance shoulder functionality and range of motion, and reduce a woman’s risk of developing lymphedema.”

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

Studies Conclusively Show Massage Therapy Reduces Stress

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

Massage therapy is a proven, non invasive way to reduce chronic stress levels in the body.  Dozens of studies have shown the effectiveness of massage therapy in reducing stress and millions of people avail themselves to the services of massage therapists to treat stress.  Using massage to reduce stress is natural and safe and unlike some forms of alternative therapies, massage therapy is a proven discipline within the medical community with scientific evidence supporting the use of massage for stress management.

What is Stress?
Stress is your body’s way of responding to a physical or emotional demand.  Everyone experiences increased stress levels at one time or another.  In fact, the body’s ability to react to stressful situations and deal with threats is critical to our survival.  However, when one is under long term stress caused by ongoing situations such as work or family problems, financial concerns, etc. the body will be in a constant heighten state – a state which has harmful effects on many bodily systems including the immune system, cardiovascular system, endocrine system, reproductive system, etc.

Does massage therapy reduce stress?
The answer to this question is unequivocally yes – massage therapy does reduce stress levels. According to The Franklin Institute web site on the human brain and stress, “Massage releases endorphins that calm the peripheral nervous system.”  The Mayo Clinic website identifies massage as a valid medical method to reduce stress and pain.  It goes on to say, “Massage reduced anxiety in depressed children and anorexic women. It also reduced anxiety and withdrawal symptoms in adults trying to quit smoking.”

In fact there are many studies that have proven the effectiveness of massage in reducing stress in various situations:

  • In October 2008 the journal Psychooncology published a study entitled, “Massage in patients undergoing intensive chemotherapy reduces serum cortisol and prolactin.” The conclusion of the study stated, “…a significant reduction in cortisol (stress hormone) could be safely achieved through massage, with associated improvement in psychological well-being.”
  • In May 2008 The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry published a study entitled, “Pilot study evaluating the effect of massage therapy on stress, anxiety and aggression in a young adult psychiatric inpatient unit.”  The study concluded that “Massage therapy had immediate beneficial effects on anxiety-related measures.”

This information is brought to you by Dr. XiPing Zhou, M.D.O.M., L.Ac. Dr. Zhou is founder & president of East West Healing Arts Institute Massage School, Dr. Zhou’s Acupuncture & Pain Management Clinic, Madison Family Wellness Community Clinic,  The Herbal Palace, & China Delight Tours. Visit anyone of these websites to learn about Chinese medicine and culture.

Massage Therapy by Caregivers Benefits Cancer Patients

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Massage therapy has been shown to reduce pain and anxiety in cancer patients, while also improving cancer patients’ mood. New research shows family caregivers can significantly reduce suffering in cancer patients at home through use of simple touch and massage techniques.

The study, sponsored by the National Cancer Institute, evaluated outcomes of a 78 minute DVD instructional program and illustrated manual in a sample of 97 patients and their caregivers. The multi-ethnic sample represented 21 types of cancer (nearly half with breast cancer) and all stages of disease, according to a press release from Collinge and Associates, the principal investigator’s company.

Caregivers included spouses, adult children, parents, siblings and friends. The project was conducted in Boston, Massachusetts, Portland, Maine, and Portland, Oregon, using English, Spanish and Chinese languages.

In the study, couples were randomized to either an experimental group using the program, or an attention control group that engaged in reading.

Results indicated significant reductions for all symptoms after both activities, indicating that companionship alone has a positive effect. However, while symptoms were reduced from 12-28 percent after reading, massage from the caregiver led to reductions of 29-44 percent.

The greatest impact was on stress/anxiety (44 percent reduction), followed by pain (34 percent), fatigue (32 percent), depression (31 percent), and nausea (29 percent). Patients reporting an optional “other” symptom (e.g., headaches) saw reductions of 42 percent with massage. Caregivers in the massage group also showed gains in confidence and comfort with using touch and massage as forms of caregiving.