Ottawa Panel evidence-based clinical practice guidelines on therapeutic massage for neck pain.
Study Goal
To update evidence-based clinical practice guidelines on the use of massage compared to controls or other treatments for adults with sub-acute and chronic neck pain.
Results Summary
Therapeutic massage was found to decrease pain, tenderness, and improve range of motion for sub-acute and chronic neck pain, with 8 positive recommendations (6 grade A and 2 grade C+). However, data was insufficient for long-term effects.
Population
Adults (>18 years) suffering from sub-acute and chronic neck pain.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
massage | decrease | pain | adults (>18 years) suffering from sub-acute and chronic neck pain | - | can decrease | #1 |
massage | decrease | tenderness | adults (>18 years) suffering from sub-acute and chronic neck pain | - | can decrease | #2 |
massage | increase | range of motion | adults (>18 years) suffering from sub-acute and chronic neck pain | - | can improve | #3 |
massage interventions | decrease | immediate post-treatment neck pain symptoms | adults (>18 years) suffering from sub-acute and chronic neck pain | - | are effective for relieving | #4 |
OBJECTIVE: To update evidence-based clinical practice guideline (EBCPG) on the use of massage compared to a control or other treatments for adults (>18 years) suffering from sub-acute and chronic neck pain. METHODS: A literature search was performed from January 1, 1948 to December 31, 2010 for relevant articles. The Ottawa Panel created inclusion criteria focusing on high methodological quality and grading methods. Recommendations were assigned a grade (A, B, C, C+, D, D+, D-) based on strength of evidence. RESULTS: A total of 45 recommendations from ten articles were developed including 8 positive recommendations (6 grade A and 2 grade C+) and 23 neutral recommendations (12 grade C and 11 grade D). DISCUSSION: Therapeutic massage can decrease pain, tenderness, and improve range of motion for sub-acute and chronic neck pain. CONCLUSION: The Ottawa Panel was able to demonstrate that the massage interventions are effective for relieving immediate post-treatment neck pain symptoms, but data is insufficient for long-term effects.