Panacea Index Logo

Command Palette

Search for a command to run...

Massage therapy for cardiac surgery patients--a randomized trial.

The Journal of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery
December 1, 2012
Lesley A Braun et al. (7 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

To determine if massage significantly reduces anxiety, pain, and muscular tension and enhances relaxation compared to rest time after cardiac surgery, while assessing feasibility, physiological effects, and patient satisfaction.

Results Summary

Massage therapy significantly reduced pain, anxiety, and muscular tension while improving relaxation and satisfaction compared to rest time, with no significant differences in heart rate, respiratory rate, or blood pressure. The effects were consistent across multiple post-surgery days.

Population

Elective cardiac surgery patients

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Administered at 2 points after surgery (days 3 or 4 and days 5 or 6)

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (14)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
massage therapy
decrease
pain
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
produced a significantly greater reduction
#1
massage therapy
decrease
anxiety
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
produced a significantly greater reduction
#2
massage therapy
decrease
muscular tension
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
produced a significantly greater reduction
#3
massage therapy
increase
relaxation
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
produced a significantly greater increase
#4
massage therapy
increase
satisfaction
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
produced a significantly greater increase
#5
massage therapy
no change
heart rate
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
No significant differences were seen
#6
massage therapy
no change
respiratory rate
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
No significant differences were seen
#7
massage therapy
no change
blood pressure
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
No significant differences were seen
#8
massage therapy
decrease
pain
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
significantly reduced
#9
massage therapy
decrease
anxiety
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
significantly reduced
#10
massage therapy
decrease
muscular tension
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
significantly reduced
#11
massage therapy
increase
relaxation
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
significantly improved
#12
rest time
no change
pain
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
experienced no significant change
#13
rest time
increase
relaxation
elective cardiac surgery patients
-
significantly improved
#14
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether massage significantly reduces anxiety, pain, and muscular tension and enhances relaxation compared with an equivalent period of rest time after cardiac surgery. The feasibility of delivering the treatment, effects on heart rate, blood pressure, and respiratory rate, and patient satisfaction were also assessed. METHODS: Elective cardiac surgery patients were randomized to receive massage or rest time at 2 points after surgery. Visual analog scales were used to measure pain, anxiety, relaxation, muscular tension, and satisfaction. Heart rate, respiratory rate, and blood pressure were measured before and after treatment. Focus groups and feedback were used to collect qualitative data about clinical significance and feasibility. RESULTS: A total of 152 patients (99% response rate) participated. Massage therapy produced a significantly greater reduction in pain (P = .001), anxiety (P < .0001), and muscular tension (P = .002) and increases in relaxation (P < .0001) and satisfaction (P = .016) compared to the rest time. No significant differences were seen for heart rate, respiratory rate, and blood pressure. Pain was significantly reduced after massage on day 3 or 4 (P < .0001) and day 5 or 6 (P = .003). The control group experienced no significant change at either time. Anxiety (P < .0001) and muscular tension (P < .0001) were also significantly reduced in the massage group at both points. Relaxation was significantly improved on day 3 or 4 for both groups (massage, P < .0001; rest time, P = .006), but only massage was effective on day 5 or 6 (P < .0001). Nurses and physiotherapists observed patient improvements and helped facilitate delivery of the treatment by the massage therapists on the ward. CONCLUSIONS: Massage therapy significantly reduced the pain, anxiety, and muscular tension and improves relaxation and satisfaction after cardiac surgery.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AgedAnalysis of VarianceAnxietyCardiac Surgical ProceduresChi-Square DistributionElective Surgical ProceduresFeasibility StudiesFemaleHumansMaleMassageMiddle AgedMuscle TonusPain MeasurementPain, PostoperativePatient SatisfactionPostoperative CarePostoperative ComplicationsProspective StudiesRelaxationRelaxation TherapySurveys and QuestionnairesTime FactorsTreatment OutcomeVictoria
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy95/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations55
Citations/Year4.2
Relative Citation Ratio2.57
NIH Percentile81.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score1.59
Normalized Score0.91
Related Supplements