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R
E S E A R C H
Massage Decreases
Lumbar Fatigue
Massage eased the feeling
of lumbar fatigue in subjects who performed sustained back extensions,
according to a recent study.
"The effect
of massage on localized lumbar muscle fatigue" was conducted
by Tim Hideaki Tanaka, Gerry Leisman, Hidetoshi Mori and Kazushi
Nishijo. The study was supported by a research grant from the College
of Massage Therapists of Ontario and was a collaboration of the
Pacific Wellness Institute in Toronto, Ontario, Canada; the Rennselaer
Polytechnic Institute Department of Cognitive Neuroscience in Troy,
New York; and Tsukuba College of Technology in Ibaragi, Japan.
Twenty-nine subjects
without back pain, ages 18-30, participated in the study. The study
tested the hypothesis that massage on the low back affects the degree
of low-back muscle fatigue caused by muscle contraction.
"Localized muscle
fatigue can be induced by sustained muscular contractions and is
associated with such external manifestations as inability to maintain
a desired force output, muscular tremor and localized pain,"
state the study's authors.
Each subject participated in two sessions,
one rest and one massage, on two separate days. Each participant was
asked to lie prone on the table with his hands crossed behind his
head and slowly extend his trunk until the inferior portion of his
rib cage no longer rested on the table. This position was held for
90 seconds.
Depending on which
treatment session the participant was involved in that day, he or
she then received either massage on the lumbar region for five minutes
or rested for five minutes. Subjects were then asked to repeat the
90-second extension.
Immediately after
each muscle contraction, participants were asked to rate their level
of fatigue on the visual analogue scale for fatigue. Electrodes
were attached to the subjects throughout the session to get electromyographic
(EMG) readings, which were used to measure muscle fatigue.
According to the
EMG readings, massage had no significant effect on muscle fatigue.
However, a paired t-test indicated that there was a significant
increase in fatigue on the visual analogue scale for those participants
who simply rested between back extensions.
"Massage application
on the lumbar region provides significant difference in the fatigue
scale as compared to rest, suggesting that massage application helped
the subjects overcome the subjective feeling of fatigue," state
the study's authors.
- Source: The Pacific
Wellness Institute in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Authors: Tim Hideaki
Tanaka, Gerry Leisman, Hidetoshi Mori and Kazushi Nishijo. Originally
published in Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2002, Vol.
2, No. 9. This study is available at www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6882/2/9
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