Massage therapy plus topical analgesic is more effective than massage alone for hand arthritis pain.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine whether applying a topical analgesic following massage is more effective than massage alone in treating pain associated with hand arthritis.
Results Summary
The massage plus topical analgesic group showed greater improvement in hand function, perceived grip strength, and reductions in hand pain, depressed mood, and sleep disturbances compared to the massage-only group, both after the first session and over the four-week period.
Population
20 adults with hand arthritis.
Effective Dosage
Weekly therapist-administered massage and daily self-massage.
Duration
Four weeks.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
massage plus topical analgesic | increase | hand function | 20 adults | - | greater improvement | #1 |
massage plus topical analgesic | increase | perceived grip strength | 20 adults | - | greater increase | #2 |
massage plus topical analgesic | decrease | hand pain | 20 adults | - | greater decrease | #3 |
massage plus topical analgesic | decrease | depressed mood | 20 adults | - | greater decrease | #4 |
massage plus topical analgesic | decrease | sleep disturbances | 20 adults | - | greater decrease | #5 |
massage therapy | decrease | pain syndromes including migraine headaches | - | - | has been effective | #6 |
massage therapy | decrease | lower back pain | - | - | has been effective | #7 |
massage therapy | decrease | fibromyalgia | - | - | has been effective | #8 |
massage therapy | decrease | neck and shoulder pain | - | - | has been effective | #9 |
massage therapy | decrease | carpal tunnel syndrome | - | - | has been effective | #10 |
massage therapy | decrease | pain related to upper limb arthritis | - | - | has been effective | #11 |
METHODS: 20 adults were randomly assigned to a massage therapy or a massage therapy plus a topical analgesic application group. Both groups received a weekly massage from a therapist and were taught self-massage (same procedure) to be done by each participant once daily over a four-week period. RESULTS: The massage plus topical analgesic group as compared to the massage group had greater improvement in hand function as measured by a digital hand exerciser following the first session and across the four-week period. That group also had a greater increase in perceived grip strength and a greater decrease in hand pain, depressed mood and sleep disturbances over the four-week period. Massage therapy has been effective for several pain syndromes including migraine headaches (Lawle and Cameron, 2006)), lower back pain (Hsieh et al., 2004), fibromyalgia (Kalichman, 2010), neck and shoulder pain (Kong et al., 2013), carpal tunnel syndrome (Elliott and Burkett, 2013), and pain related to upper limb arthritis (Field et al., 2013). The purpose of the current study was to determine whether applying a topical analgesic following massage might be more effective than massage alone in treating pain associated with hand arthritis.