Publisher DOI: 10.3390/brainsci10100721
Title: Effect of psycho-regulatory massage therapy on pain and depression in women with chronic and/or somatoform back pain : a randomized controlled trial
Language: English
Authors: Baumgart, Sabine Edelgard 
Baumbach-Kraft, Anja 
Lorenz, Jürgen 
Keywords: massage therapy; chronic back pain; depression; oxytocin; C-tactile fibers; somatoform pain (ICD 10); somatic symptom disorder (DSM-5)
Issue Date: 12-Oct-2020
Publisher: MDPI
Journal or Series Name: Brain Sciences 
Volume: 10
Issue: 10
Abstract: 
Chronic unspecific back pain (cBP) is often associated with depressive symptoms, negative body perception, and abnormal interoception. Given the general failure of surgery in cBP, treatment guidelines focus on conservative therapies. Neurophysiological evidence indicates that C-tactile fibers associated with the oxytonergic system can be activated by slow superficial stroking of the skin in the back, shoulder, neck, and dorsal limb areas. We hypothesize that, through recruitment of C-tactile fibers, psycho-regulatory massage therapy (PRMT) can reduce pain in patients with cBP. In our study, 66 patients were randomized to PRMT or CMT (classical massage therapy) over a 12-week period and tested by questionnaires regarding pain (HSAL= Hamburger Schmerz Adjektiv Liste; Hamburg Pain adjective list), depression (BDI-II = Beck depression inventory), and disability (ODI = Oswestry Disability Index). In all outcome measures, patients receiving PRMT improved significantly more than did those receiving CMT. The mean values of the HSAL sensory subscale decreased by −51.5% in the PRMT group compared to −6.7% in the CMT group. Depressive symptoms were reduced by −55.69% (PRMT) and −3.1% (CMT), respectively. The results suggest that the superiority of PRMT over CMT may rely on its ability to activate the C-tactile fibers of superficial skin layers, recruiting the oxytonergic system.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/16680
ISSN: 2076-3425
Review status: This version was peer reviewed (peer review)
Institute: Fakultät Life Sciences 
Department Medizintechnik 
Type: Article
Additional note: article number: 721. This article belongs to the Special Issue: Depression and Anxiety: The Significance of Touch in Psychiatry—Clinical and Neuroscientific Approaches.
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