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R
E S E A R C H
Massage
Benefits Women with Breast Cancer
Massage therapy reduced depression,
anxiety and anger in women with breast cancer, and increased their
levels of dopamine, serotonin, natural killer cells and lymphocytes,
according to recent research.
"Breast
cancer patients have improved immune and neuroendocrine functions
following massage therapy" was conducted by the Touch Research
Institutes, Department of Pediatrics, Hematology/Oncology Clinics,
Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center and Department of Medicine
at the University of Miami School of Medicine.
Thirty-four
women with Stage 1 or 2 breast cancer were randomly assigned to
either a massage-therapy group or a standard-treatment control group.
Each participant had completed radiation or chemotherapy treatment
at least three months before the study started.
Women
in the massage-therapy group received three 30-minute massages per
week for five weeks. The massage involved stroking, squeezing and
stretching techniques on the head, arms, legs, feet and back. Women
in the control group received standard treatment only, with the
option to receive massage after the study.
The
State Trait Anxiety Inventory, Profile of Mood States and the Symptom
Checklist-90-R were used to evaluate participants’ anxiety
and mood at the beginning and end of the study period.
Urine
samples were taken from the women on the first and last days of
the study, and their blood was drawn.
Results of the urine tests showed that
serotonin and dopamine levels for the massage group increased, and
the blood tests showed that there was a significant increase in their
natural killer (NK) cell numbers and lymphocytes.
"NK
cells spontaneously destroy a wide variety of cancer and virus-infected
cells and are involved in eliminating metastases," state the
study’s authors. "Lymphocytes are precursor cells of
immunological function as well as regulators and effectors of immunity."
Results
of the questionnaires showed that women in the massage-therapy group
had reduced anxiety, depression, anger and hostility.
"In
the current study, massage therapy was found to be a safe treatment,
as no adverse effects were reported, and massage was found to positively
impact the psychology, immunology, and biochemistry of women with
breast cancer," state the study’s authors.
"In
summary, the self-reports of reduced stress, anxiety, anger/hostility,
and improved mood, and the corroborating findings of increased dopamine
and serotonin levels and increased NK cell number (the primary outcome
measure) and lymphocytes suggest that massage therapy has positive
applications for breast cancer survivors."
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Source: The Touch Research
Institutes, Department of Pediatrics, Hematology/Oncology Clinics,
Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center and Department of Medicine
at the University of Miami School of Medicine. Authors: Maria Hernandez-Reif,
Ph.D., Gail Ironson, M.D., Tiffany Field, Ph.D., Judith Hurley,
M.D., Galia Katz, Miguel Diego, Sharlene Weiss, Ph.D., Mary Ann
Fletcher, Ph.D., Saul Schanberg, M.D., Ph.D., and Cynthia Kuhn,
Ph.D. Originally published in the Journal
of Psychosomatic Research.
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