skip this welcome screenSkip This Welcome Screen


You will be redirected in
40
 seconds
 
Massage Magazine ©2012 | 5150 Palm Valley Rd. Suite 103 | Ponte Vedra Beach, FL 32082 | P:800.533.4263 F:904.285.9944

Balneotherapy Eases Osteoarthritis

posted:2/3/2009
Article Tools
Comment on this story
Share |

news
facebook digg twitter linkedin icio

Soaking in hot mineral pools once a week significantly improved the symptoms of osteoarthritis and reduced the amount of medication taken by people with the condition, according to a recent study.

“The effect of balneotherapy on osteoarthritis. Is an intermittent regimen effective?” was conducted by staff of the Asaf-Harofe Medican Center, in Zerifin, Israel, and the Tel Aviv University Sackler Faculty of Medicine, in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Seventy-two people with knee osteoarthritis for more than three months participated in the study. They were randomly assigned to either the no-treatment control group or the balneotherapy group.

Subjects in the balneotherapy group soaked in the natural thermal springs at Chamei Yoav, a spa in central Israel, once a week for six weeks. They bathed in the pools for 15 minutes, followed by one hour of rest, and 15 more minutes of soaking. The water at Chamei Yoav is about 98 degrees Fahrenheit and contains sodium, chloride, bicarbonate, calcium, bromide, magnesium, potassium and sulphate.

All participants were evaluated by the same doctor seven days before the start of the spa therapy, four weeks into the therapy, at the end of the six-week spa-therapy period, and four weeks after the spa therapy had stopped.
Pain was assessed on a visual analogue scale, and subjects and their physician rated changes in the severity of the disease. The number of

non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID) and/or analgesics taken was recorded at each evaluation as well.

Results of the study showed that, after six weeks of spa therapy, there was a significant improvement in symptoms of osteoarthritis in the balneotherapy group, and the improvement was sustained until the end of the study, four weeks after the spa therapy had ended.

After four weeks of spa therapy, there was also a significant improvement in participant and physician evaluation of disease severity. The improvement peaked after the full six weeks of spa therapy, and the peak was maintained until the end of the study four weeks later.

The number of NSAID and/or analgesic tablets taken by subjects in the balneotherapy group was also significantly reduced. There were no such changes in the no-treatment control group.

“We showed that balneotherapy … on a once weekly basis, might significantly improve symptoms of [osteoarthritis],” state the study’s authors. “Another important observation was the ability of our patients to reduce their NSAID and analgesic consumption during this period.”

Source: Asaf-Harofe Medical Center, in Zerifin, Israel, and Tel Aviv University Sackler Faculty of Medicine, in Tel Aviv, Israel. Authors: Moshe Tishler, Oskar Rosenburg, Ofer Levy, Iris Elias and Mirit Amit Vazina. Originally published in the European Journal of Internal Medicine, 2004, Vol. 15, pp. 93-96.



news
facebook digg twitter linkedin delicio

Comments


Be the first to comment on this Article

Related Massage Articles:




massage magazine facebook


massage magazine twitter


massage magazine linked-in














 
 
MASSAGE Magazine ©2012 | 5150 Palm Valley Rd. Suite 103 | Ponte Vedra Beach, FL 32082 | P:904.285.6020 F:904.285.9944
Also visit our other sites: FutureLMT.com | Chiroeco.com | StudentDC.com
Content