Sep
5
2023

A Guide to Using the Forearms

Auth Method of Therapeutic Massage: A Guide to Using the Forearms
A new DVD just been released showing how to massage without taxing the delicate joints of the hand and increase career longevity. Learn to give a full body massage using the forearms as the primary tool. These techniques can be used for both deep tissue work and light circulatory massage. This DVD teaches simple qi gong exercises for better body mechanics, as well as, how to use body weight to engage tissue, depth of pressure, speed of strokes and developing sensitivity in the forearms.

This 74-minute instructional massage DVD will teach therapists how to give a full-body massage using the forearms as the primary tool. By using the forearms, massage therapists will be able to work deeper and longer with less wear and tear on the more fragile joints of the hands. It covers body mechanics, how to use body weight to engage tissue, depth of pressure, speed of strokes and developing sensitivity in the forearms.

The DVD is available from: http://www.terrarosa.com.au/dvd/auth_method.htm

Sep
5
2023

Integrative Medicine

At the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, they’ve an active research program in the field, including treatments like massage. Brent Bauer is director of Complementary and Integrative Medicine at Mayo.

Brent Bauer said that: We’ve done two studies now, in patients who’ve had cardiovascular surgery. So big a incision down the front of the chest, rib cage spread open, and what we’ve done is taken a group of patients, given them massage on Day 2 and Day 4 after their surgery, and mostly worked in the upper back, because that’s where a lot of the pain and discomfort resides after having your chest opened. And what we found is comparing that group to a group who did not receive massage, we were able to show a statistically significant improvement in pain, anxiety and tension.

This was a certified massage therapist who was fairly free to use the different types of massage that she wanted. She could use light massage, deep massage, Swedish massage and so forth. We didn’t try and restrict her to a certain number of strokes, or certain patterns, we wanted to allow a massage therapist to do the best job she could.

And it’s important to do that though, you have to have some kind of control, because otherwise we can’t be sure if it’s the massage or just the simple fact that somebody’s spending time with you. So we did as we actually had our massage therapist go in the control group, the patients that did not receive massage, and she actually spent about the same amount of time, about 20 minutes, speaking to them, talking to them, and just mostly trying to be a caring presence. So we were matching the amount of time spent in both groups.

The first one was a small study, about 60 patients that did show statistical significance, but the second study which we’re just looking at now, is about 220 patients, and that’s where we’re trying to tease out some of the questions Can we reduce the use of narcotics? Can we reduce the length of stay?

We’ve done a number of studies on herbal products, because that’s very popular with our patients, and we really want to be able to say what’s good, what’s not, and make sure our patients have a an ability to make an informed decision. So this was a study in cancer patients, a wide variety of cancer patients, by and large the number one concern they complain about is fatigue. Ginseng has some old studies that suggest it might be helpful for fatigue. We gave one group a placebo, we gave the other group ginseng, and we found the group that received ginseng less fatigued, better quality of life, overall greater satisfaction.

It was kind of ‘Gemisch’ of different patients. We had different cancer types, different stages and so forth, and that actually probably is a weakness of the study, so we’re actually replicating that study with a much more focused group of cancer patients to see if we can get stronger data.

The problem with previous studies in ginseng in other areas has been which ginseng, there’s different varieties, and what concentration, because you never quite know what you’re buying off the shelf.

It’s a critical component for any herbal medicine, but especially ginseng. We actually are lucky; right across the border here in Wisconsin, we have a group of ginseng growers, and so we’re able to work with them to harvest the single batch in a uniform fashion, all of the same age, processed the same way, we analysed the ginsenoside content, which is the active ingredient, before and also after the study, so we were sure that we didn’t lose potency over time. So doing all those precautions, you then have a much more replicable result. But it also means you can’t just go to the shelf and pick a ginseng and think you’re going to get the same results. You really have to follow the same type of product.

Which is the point. So you’re sitting, listening to this in Perth, Australia, or Adelaide, Australia, and you think ‘Well that sounds good, I’ll just pop down to the local chemist and buy some’. What are you buying, what do you look for?

With any study, you have to go back to the study and the study should identify the product. In this case we used the ginsenoside concentration of 5% and actually the Ginseng Growers Association of Wisconsin actually has a link on their site to a product that is similar to what we used in the study.

And you’ve done a fascinating study, coming more into Australia’s region, a herb from Ambon, just in Indonesia.

Brent Bauer: So there’s a beautiful old text about 350 years old, called the Ambonese Herbal, written by Rumphius who was a Dutch East Indies soldier and ended up on Ambon. Spent his entire life talking to the natives and really recording in a very detailed fashion how they used the herbs and what they used them for. Now we flash forward 350 years later, we now have a translation of the first book of seven. We looked at that first chapter, we found all the references to herbs and how they were used, and then we looked at all the databases subsequent to that time, to see if any of those uses had been validated. And we were able to show that about 80% of the herbal uses in that first book have subsequently been validated. In other words, indigenous knowledge appears to have been correct. So that was pretty cool, and I think that gives a lot of cache to our historical knowledge and historical use. What was really cool though, there were about eight herbs that had not been subsequently studied. So the Ambonese Herbal said, ‘Here are some things that we think work, but nobody’s ever studied them.’ So we actually went to Samoa where one of our PhD students had a connection, it wasn’t the island of Ambon, but harvested some Atun racemosa, which is a kernel, or a little nut-like plant, that’s actually used after their tattooing ceremonies. And if you’ve ever seen the tattoo ceremonies, lots of punctures to the skin, not much infection. So they use it as kind of an antibacterial. Well it turns out in Rumphius’ book that was one of the indications, Atun racemosa was used for infections.

Norman Swan: There’s been a fairly significant move in American hospitals towards having departments such as yours, Integrative Medicine, because of the enormous demand outside. But it’s a difficult area because if you take the cynics here who’ve looked at some of these alternative medicines, or complementary medicines, they say, ‘Look, the bigger the trial, the better the trial, the harder it is to find any effect’, and in the end what you’re doing is patronising patients, to make them feel a bit better, but not really finding real evidence that what they’re doing helps them, and sometimes if they’ve bought it say from India, Ayurvedic medicine, it could be doing them harm.

Brent Bauer: And I think there’s a good distinction here, certainly things with herbs and dietary supplements. Americans have a fascination and we tend to think that we can still smoke, drink too much, never exercise, and eat junk food, ‘But if I take the magic herb, I won’t have that many health problems’. So that is a real challenge, and that’s one of the reasons I think maybe herbal studies don’t come out very positive, because we’re looking for magical qualities instead of how they’re traditionally used. You know, green tea, you could drink five or six cups a day, as in many Asian cultures, you probably get a very different experience than if you pop two extracts of green tea. So there are a lot of challenges there.

Norman Swan: Now just on that, it’s the whole thing which we said often on the Health Report is the stuff in whole foods, which have got benefits working together, which when you extract what you think is the main game, it may not be.

Brent Bauer: We’ve often gotten burned with that type of philosophy, maybe Vitamin E is a good example. Vitamin E in the diet looks like it’s very healthy; Vitamin E as a concentrated alpha tocopherol doesn’t seem to work, and may actually have some negative effects. So I think if you put the broad category of dietary supplements on one side, I think there’s been a lot more hype than delivery.

Now on the other side though, I think the mind-body side, where we talk about meditation, imagery and things, if you look at how the typical American is right now, frazzled, running at full tilt, too many things going on, we know there’s a price to pay for that type of stress. So when you introduce things like meditation, acupuncture and massage, things that might be leading to a slow-down, things that might be leading to reduced response to stress, and that’s what many of these studies do confirm, then we start to get into an idea of maybe this is something important. There’s probably a dividing line between some of the magical thinking, which I think has been over-hyped and we should be very cautious. On the other hand, we shouldn’t throw out the baby with the bathwater. If we’re frazzled, we darn well had better start thinking about ways to take better care of ourselves in that regard.

Norman Swan: And indeed, particularly out of Britain, there’s been some very good randomised trials of mindfulness meditation, Buddhist-style meditation, which show significant benefits.

Brent Bauer: Absolutely. I think you know, what’s the harm from meditation? Very limited. Maybe you spend some money to go to a class, maybe you buy a DVD or a book. If you don’t like it, if it doesn’t fit for you, there’s no harm, you know, you try something else. But if you find it to be useful, if you find that it fits your lifestyle, and it starts to get you off that rapid train of non-stop the brain’s going, the brain’s going, the brain’s going, I think we’re actually starting to see a lot of studies suggesting that kind of stress kills neurones, affects our cognition. So not addressing anything I think would actually be a mistake.

Norman Swan: How do you get the balance in practitioners? Because one of the controversies in Australia is that you tend to get general practitioners who either do one or the other. They kind of say they do both, but some of them are so committed to complementary medicine, that’s kind of all they do. And getting the balance right is the critical issue. How do you deal with that issue?

Brent Bauer: The Mayo Clinic is a very conservative institution. I mean we have a deeply-held vision that the needs of the patient come first. So as long as we live under that, then I’m free to ask ‘What’s going to make my patient do better, feel better, get better’? And so I can pick from either side, and as long as I have evidence, then the colleagues who live over here maybe on the more cynical side, have actually been very accepting. And those who are very much more on the earlier doctor side, may be too quick to adopt. When we show them the evidence that things don’t work, they actually can be brought into kind of that middle ground as well. So I think by bringing science first, doing the research and doing it well, and applying those results locally, we actually can kind of keep to the middle ground where the best benefit for the patient’s going to occur.

Norman Swan: Dr Brent Bauer who’s director of Complementary and Integrative Medicine at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.

References:

Pruthi S et al. Value of massage therapy for patients in a breast clinic. Clin J Oncol Nurs 2009 Aug; 13(4):422-5

Barton DL et al. Pilot study of Panax quinquefolius (American ginseng) to improve cancer-related fatigue: a randomized, double-blind, dose-findidng evalutation: NCCTG trial NO3CA Support Care Cancer 2009 (Epub ahead of print)

Buenz EJ et al. Searching historical herbal texts for potential new drugs. British Medical Journal December, 2006;333:1314-1315

http://www.abc.net.au/rn/healthreport/stories/2009/2715314.htm

Sep
5
2023

New Restorative Yoga DVD

A new DVD on restorative Yoga from real Bodywork is now available.

It features six sequences including a 12 minute meditation, a 15 minute morning session, a 45 minute mid-day sequence, two 55 minute evening routines and one 85 minute sequence for restful sleep. A total of over four hours of yoga practice!

Explore deep relaxation, rejuvenation and healing by experiencing restorative yoga. In this style of yoga, each pose is held for several minutes supported by blankets, allowing the nervous system to completely quiet and return to a state of balance, while gently stretching and opening the body.

Beautifully filmed in Santa Barbara, California in high definition, widescreen with over four hours of footage.

The DVD is available from http://www.terrarosa.com.au/yoga/restorative.htm

Sep
5
2023

Massage therapy proves beneficial for cancer sufferers

AUSTRALIAN cancer experts have supported a study by the American Institutes of Health which found massage therapy may have immediate benefits on pain and mood among patients with advanced cancer.

The Cancer Council of New South Wales said scientific research had shown that massage could reduce pain, fatigue, anxiety, depression and nausea as well as improving sleep, quality of life and mental clarity and alertness.

The council’s Professor Jim Bishop said massage therapy could benefit the physical, emotional and mental state of people at all stages of cancer.

“Many people with cancer wonder whether any complementary therapies can help them. Massage and other gentle bodywork techniques that focus on the positive effects of human touch are very popular complementary therapies,” Professor Bishop said.

“Instead of being used to work out knots, detoxify the body, or increase one’s range of motion, massage may become a way to lower anxiety and pain, improve energy, or decrease nausea.

“It is a way to feel more loved and helps to re-establish a connection with oneself and others. It may ease the discomfort of a medical procedure or help pass the time while waiting for a consultation with the doctor.

“Some benefits people have described from receiving massage include feeling whole again, being able to share feelings in an informal setting, re-establishing a positive body image and rebuilding hope.”

Nepean Hospital oncologist Dr Georgette Danyal said different types of massage could be administered to cancer patients.

“There has been a lot of work that has been done on the introduction of massage therapies as part of the service for cancer patients,” Dr Danyal said.

“Just general massage therapy is recommended where appropriate as a relaxation strategy. A lot of cancer patients are quite anxious when they’re undergoing treatment or just after they’ve been diagnosed, so sometimes gentle massage is done to help a lot with relaxation for these patients.

“If patients have had breast cancer and they’ve had their lymph nodes removed they are at risk of developing lymphoedema and if they do develop it then we do a very specialised lymphatic massage.

“Lymphatic massage will basically assist in stimulating lymphatic drainage in the system and that will assist in reduction of a swollen oedema – they will be able to feel relief from their discomfort.

“Another effect of the massage is relaxation too because it is a very gentle type of massage – a lot of the patients that come to see us after lymphatic massage say they feel so calm and relaxed.”

Dr Danyal said frequency of treatment varied from patient to patient.

“Some patients go weekly to have [massage therapy] done and they feel that by doing it weekly it helps and it is frequent enough but it does vary,” she said.

“Cost of course is a big issue with it as well because a lot of the patients that come in are not in a financial position to be able to access this service at a reasonable cost.”

Professor Bishop said while massage therapy had proved beneficial, it was most successful when administered in conjunction with conventional medicines.

http://www.consultmagazine.net/StoryView.asp?StoryID=337389

Sep
5
2023

Evidence on RSI ‘urgently needed’

Research into the causes and treatment of repetitive strain injury is urgently needed for the millions of sufferers worldwide, say experts.

Decades after RSI was first reported, evidence is still lacking to guide diagnosis and care, The Lancet reports.

Unless clear definitions and evidence of effective treatments are found, RSI will remain controversial, says Dutch author Professor Maurits van Tulder.

RSI is an umbrella term for disorders that stem from repetitive movements.

Disabling

Several countries report statistics showing that RSI affects 5% to 10% of the population.

For some occupations, such as dressmakers and secretaries, this goes up to 40%.

According to the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, almost 450,000 UK workers have upper limb RSI.

And between 2003 and 2004, about 4.7m work days were lost to RSI, as workers took an average 18 days sick leave.

Many cases of RSI involve painful hands, wrists, arms, shoulders and neck, and are associated with modern desk work involving computer equipment such as keyboards and mice.

In some populations that we’ve studied, between 22% and 40% of people have evidence of RSI
Professor Peter Buckle, University of Surrey

While there are theories as to how these conditions develop, none are supported by strong scientific evidence, and diagnosis is difficult.

Some experts have suggested that the continuous contraction of muscles from repetitive movements can result in disrupted local blood circulation, or that pain sensors in the muscles could become over-sensitive.

Doctors are also struggling when it comes to appropriate treatments – although several studies have shown exercise to be beneficial for symptom relief.

Treatments such as massage or the use of ergonomic keyboards are often recommended, but researchers trying to verify that they worked found they did not reduce sick leave in people who used them.

‘Disappointing’

Professor van Tulder, who looked at the available evidence on RSI to date, explained: “No gold standard tests for RSI exist. Strong recommendations for any therapeutic intervention cannot be made at present.

“The disorder will remain controversial until high-quality trials provide clear definitions of repetitive strain injury and evidence of effective treatments.”

A British expert, Professor Peter Buckle from the University of Surrey, said that there was an urgent need for more research.

He said: “Given the prevalence in the working population, it’s disappointing we have such a paucity of high quality evidence about diagnosis and treatment.”

Many organisations were blind to the fact that they had massive problems with RSI,” he added.

He advised: “Often when people are finally diagnosed with RSI their condition is often much worse, so it is important that people not only try to prevent it happening in the first place, but also consult a doctor as early as possible.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6692683.stm

Sep
5
2023

Lumbar Supports Not Particularly Effective For Lower Back Pain

Lumbar or lower back supports — those large belts that people wear around their waists when they lift or carry heavy objects — are not very useful for preventing low back pain, according to a new systematic review.

Although many people use lumbar supports to bolster the back muscles, they are no more effective than lifting education — or no treatment whatsoever — in preventing related pain or reducing disability in those who suffer from the condition, reviewers found.

“We recommend the general population and workers not wear lumbar supports to prevent low back pain or for the management of lower back pain,” said lead author Ingrid van Duijvenbode, a teacher and member of the research group at the Amsterdam School for Health Professionals in the Netherlands.

She and her colleagues looked at 15 studies — seven prevention and eight treatment studies — that included more than 15,000 people. When measuring pain prevention or reduction in number of sick days used, the researchers found little or no difference between people who used supports and their peers who did not.

“There is moderate evidence that lumbar supports do not prevent low back pain or sick leave more effectively than no intervention or education on lifting techniques in preventing long-term low back pain,” van Duijvenbode said. “There is conflicting evidence on the effectiveness of lumbar supports as treatment compared to no intervention or other interventions.”

The review appears in the latest issue of The Cochrane Library, a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that evaluates medical research. Systematic reviews draw evidence-based conclusions about medical practice after considering both the content and quality of existing medical trials on a topic.

“This continues the line of research that shows lumbar supports make no difference in treating or preventing low back pain,” said Joel Press, M.D., associate professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. “Looking at the literature on lumbar supports, it is difficult to make any conclusions because these studies are using supports for many different causes of low back pain. It would be hard to prove any one treatment is effective for every type of back pain, just as it would be difficult to prove that any one heart medication would be good for every type of heart problem.”

Press said that lumbar supports are useful only as an additional treatment to exercise and other interventions. He said that the bracing makes it more comfortable for some people to move around.

“I usually tell my patients asking about lumbar supports that while there is not a lot of evidence that it is useful overall, there are still individuals who might benefit from their use,” Press said. “But it should be used as an adjunct treatment if it helps to activate patients to increase their activity and exercise.”

Reference: van Duijvenbode ICD, et al. “Lumbar supports for prevention and treatment of low back pain (Review).” Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2008, Issue 2.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/04/080422202813.htm