Panacea Index Logo

Command Palette

Search for a command to run...

Five-week outcomes from a dosing trial of therapeutic massage for chronic neck pain.

Annals of family medicine
January 1, 2014
Karen J Sherman et al. (7 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, N.I.H., ExtramuralHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine the optimal dose of massage for improving neck-related dysfunction and pain intensity in individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain.

Results Summary

The study found that 60-minute massage sessions 2 or 3 times per week significantly improved neck dysfunction and pain intensity compared to a wait-list control, while 30-minute sessions did not show significant benefits regardless of frequency.

Population

Individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain recruited from an integrated health care system and the general population.

Effective Dosage

30-minute visits 2 or 3 times weekly, or 60-minute visits 1, 2, or 3 times weekly.

Duration

4 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
30-minute massage treatments (2 or 3 times weekly for 4 weeks)
no change
clinically meaningful improvement in neck dysfunction
individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain
no significant change
were not significantly better than the wait list control condition
#1
30-minute massage treatments (2 or 3 times weekly for 4 weeks)
no change
clinically meaningful improvement in pain intensity
individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain
no significant change
were not significantly better than the wait list control condition
#2
60-minute massage treatments (2 times weekly for 4 weeks)
increase
clinically meaningful improvement in neck dysfunction
individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain
relative risk = 3.41
significantly increased the likelihood of improvement
#3
60-minute massage treatments (3 times weekly for 4 weeks)
increase
clinically meaningful improvement in neck dysfunction
individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain
relative risk = 4.98
significantly increased the likelihood of improvement
#4
60-minute massage treatments (2 times weekly for 4 weeks)
increase
clinically meaningful improvement in pain intensity
individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain
relative risk = 2.30
significantly increased the likelihood of improvement
#5
60-minute massage treatments (3 times weekly for 4 weeks)
increase
clinically meaningful improvement in pain intensity
individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain
relative risk = 2.73
significantly increased the likelihood of improvement
#6
Abstract

PURPOSE: This trial was designed to evaluate the optimal dose of massage for individuals with chronic neck pain. METHODS: We recruited 228 individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain from an integrated health care system and the general population, and randomized them to 5 groups receiving various doses of massage (a 4-week course consisting of 30-minute visits 2 or 3 times weekly or 60-minute visits 1, 2, or 3 times weekly) or to a single control group (a 4-week period on a wait list). We assessed neck-related dysfunction with the Neck Disability Index (range, 0-50 points) and pain intensity with a numerical rating scale (range, 0-10 points) at baseline and 5 weeks. We used log-linear regression to assess the likelihood of clinically meaningful improvement in neck-related dysfunction (≥5 points on Neck Disability Index) or pain intensity (≥30% improvement) by treatment group. RESULTS: After adjustment for baseline age, outcome measures, and imbalanced covariates, 30-minute treatments were not significantly better than the wait list control condition in terms of achieving a clinically meaningful improvement in neck dysfunction or pain, regardless of the frequency of treatments. In contrast, 60-minute treatments 2 and 3 times weekly significantly increased the likelihood of such improvement compared with the control condition in terms of both neck dysfunction (relative risk = 3.41 and 4.98, P = .04 and .005, respectively) and pain intensity (relative risk = 2.30 and 2.73; P = .007 and .001, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: After 4 weeks of treatment, we found multiple 60-minute massages per week more effective than fewer or shorter sessions for individuals with chronic neck pain. Clinicians recommending massage and researchers studying this therapy should ensure that patients receive a likely effective dose of treatment.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultChronic PainClinical ProtocolsDisability EvaluationFemaleHumansMaleMassageMiddle AgedNeck PainPain MeasurementTreatment Outcome
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality90/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations38
Citations/Year3.5
Relative Citation Ratio2.04
NIH Percentile75.1%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.84
Normalized Score0.72
Related Supplements
Five-week outcomes from a dosing trial of therapeutic massag... | Panacea Index