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R
E S E A R C H
Massage
for Spinal-Cord Injury
Massage benefits people with spinal-cord injuries
by increasing their range of motion and muscle strength while decreasing
anxiety and depression, according to a recent study.
"Spinal Cord Patients Benefit
from Massage Therapy" was conducted by Miguel Diego, Tiffany
Field, Ph.D., Maria Hernandez-Reif, Ph.D., Sybil Hart, Ph.D., and
Tory Field, of the Touch Research Institute at the University of
Miami School of Medicine, along with Bernard Brucker of the university's
psychiatry department and Iris Burman, co-founder and director of
Educating Hands School of Massage in Miami, Florida.
Fifteen males and five females participated
in the study. Their average age was 39 and each had C5-C7 spinal
cord injuries for at least one year. The subjects were stratified
by range of motion and randomly assigned to either a massage-therapy
or exercise group.
The massage-therapy group received
two 40-minute massages per week for five weeks. The exercise group
was taught an exercise routine that they performed on their own
twice a week for five weeks.
On the first and last days of the study,
a physiotherapist with no knowledge of group assignment assessed participants'
range of motion and muscle strength, and administered the Modified
Barthel Index, which rates self-care and mobility skills.
The massage group showed a greater
increase in muscle strength than the exercise group on the Manual
Muscle Test, designed to assess motor function after spinal-cord
injury.
Range-of-motion tests revealed that
both groups improved in shoulder abduction, but the massage group
showed greater improvement in wrist extension and flexion.
The Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression
scale was completed on the first and last days of the study, and
the State Anxiety Inventory was used to assess participants' anxiety
immediately before and after massage on the first and last days
of the study.
Members of the massage group showed
a greater decrease in depression scores on the last day of the research.
They also had significantly lower levels of anxiety than subjects
in the exercise group immediately following massage on the first
and last days of the study.
"The increased muscle strength
and range of motion may have contributed to the decrease in their
depression and anxiety," state the study's authors. "These
data suggest that patients with spinal cord injury can benefit from
massage therapy."
The authors recommended future studies
to assess massage therapy for other problems related to spinal-cord
injury, such as spasticity and pain.
- Source: The Touch
Research Institute. Authors: Miguel A. Diego, Tiffany Field, Ph.D.,
Maria Hernandez-Reif, Ph.D., Sybil Hart, Ph.D. Originally published
in the International Journal of Neuroscience, 2002, Vol. 112, pp.
133-142.
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