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Effects of Connective Tissue Massage on Pain in Primiparous Women After Cesarean Birth.

Journal of obstetric, gynecologic, and neonatal nursing : JOGNN
September 1, 2018
Mary Colleen Simonelli et al. (6 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

To evaluate the efficacy of connective tissue massage in reducing postoperative pain, stress, and opioid use in women after unplanned cesarean births.

Results Summary

Massage therapy significantly increased relaxation, decreased pain and stress, and reduced opioid use on postoperative days 1 and 2 compared to standard care or individualized attention. Opioid use in the massage group decreased linearly, unlike the nonlinear pattern in control groups.

Population

Primiparous women who underwent unplanned cesarean births of singleton newborns at term gestation.

Effective Dosage

20-minute massage session.

Duration

Single session on Postoperative Day 1.

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (4)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
connective tissue massage
increase
relaxation
primiparous women after unplanned cesarean birth
-
increased
#1
connective tissue massage
decrease
pain
primiparous women after unplanned cesarean birth
-
decreased
#2
connective tissue massage
decrease
stress
primiparous women after unplanned cesarean birth
-
decreased
#3
connective tissue massage
decrease
opioid use
primiparous women after unplanned cesarean birth
-
decreased
#4
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the efficacy of connective tissue massage to reduce postoperative pain in primiparous women on Postoperative Day 1 after unplanned cesarean birth. DESIGN: A randomized controlled trial with three groups: intervention (Group 1), control or standard care (Group 2), and individualized attention (Group 3). SETTING: Family/newborn units of a large teaching hospital in the Northeastern United States. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 165 women who experienced unplanned cesarean births of singleton newborns at term gestation. METHODS: Participants were randomized to three groups: those in Group 1 received a 20-minute massage, those in Group 2 received the usual standard of care, and those in Group 3 received 20 minutes of individualized attention. On Postoperative Day 1, participants completed questionnaires to measure overall pain, stress, and relaxation at Time 1 and again 60 minutes later. Daily numeric pain ratings and medication consumption data were retrieved from the electronic health care records. Latent growth modeling and analysis of variance were used to analyze data, as appropriate. RESULTS: Participants in Group 1 had increased relaxation (p < .001), decreased pain (p < .001), decreased stress (p < .001), and decreased opioid use on Day 1 (p = .031) and Day 2 (p = .006) of the hospital stay after the intervention compared with the other groups. Additionally, opioid use in Group 1 decreased linearly, whereas the control groups had a nonlinear pattern of change. CONCLUSION: Using massage therapy during postoperative hospitalization improved relaxation and decreased pain, stress, and opioid use in this sample of women after unplanned cesarean births.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultAnalgesics, OpioidCesarean SectionConnective TissueFemaleHumansMassagePain ManagementPain, PostoperativePregnancyTreatment Outcome
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations12
Citations/Year1.7
Relative Citation Ratio1.25
NIH Percentile58.5%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.05
Normalized Score0.70
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