| Literature DB >> 26788367 |
Andrew D Vigotsky1, Ryan P Bruhns2.
Abstract
Manual therapy has long been a component of physical rehabilitation programs, especially to treat those in pain. The mechanisms of manual therapy, however, are not fully understood, and it has been suggested that its pain modulatory effects are of neurophysiological origin and may be mediated by the descending modulatory circuit. Therefore, the purpose of this review is to examine the neurophysiological response to different types of manual therapy, in order to better understand the neurophysiological mechanisms behind each therapy's analgesic effects. It is concluded that different forms of manual therapy elicit analgesic effects via different mechanisms, and nearly all therapies appear to be at least partially mediated by descending modulation. Additionally, future avenues of mechanistic research pertaining to manual therapy are discussed.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26788367 PMCID: PMC4695672 DOI: 10.1155/2015/292805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1542
Neurophysiological response to manual therapy variations.
| Study | Subjects | Control/sham | Variation | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Degenhardt et al. [ | 7 women and 3 men with ( | Light touch | OMT | ↑ |
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| McPartland et al. [ | Osteopathic patient population ( | Sham manipulation | OMT | ↑ AEA |
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| Vernon et al. [ | 27 healthy males | (1) Control group laid supine on a treatment table | SMT | ↑ |
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| Christian et al. [ | 40 male subjects who were chiropractic patients and students with and without pain | Sham (joint taken to end-range of motion) | SMT | → |
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| Sanders et al. [ | 9 males and 9 females with acute (<2 weeks) low back pain | Sham group ( | SMT | → |
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| Plaza-Manzano et al. | 30 graduate school students | No treatment | SMT | ↑ orexin A |
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| Skyba et al. [ | 113 male Sprague-Dawley rats | (1) Vehicle w/manipulation | Knee manipulation | Serotonin-mediated |
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| Martins et al. [ | 8 male Swiss mice per group | (1) Control | Ankle joint mobilization | EO-mediated† |
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| Martins et al. [ | 8 male Swiss mice per group | (1) Control | Ankle joint mobilization | CBR-mediated† |
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| Martins et al. [ | 8 male Swiss mice per group | (1) Control | Ankle joint mobilization | Adenosine-mediated† |
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| Martins et al. [ | 8 adult male Wistar rats per group | (1) Sham | Ankle joint mobilization | ↓ glial cell activation |
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| Paungmali et al. [ | 7 females and 17 males with lateral epicondylalgia | (1) Placebo | MWM | No increase in tolerance over treatment period |
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| Paungmali et al. [ | 4 females and 14 males with lateral epicondylalgia | (1) Placebo | MWM | Non-EO-mediated† |
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| Santos et al. [ | Male Wistar rats | (1) Control | NM | Dynorphin-mediated |
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Kaada and Torsteinbø | 6 male and 6 female subjects with a history of myalgia | Connective tissue massage | ↑ | |
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| Trentini et al. [ | Male and female Sprague-Dawley rats | (1) Control | Acupressure | EO-mediated† |
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| Fassoulaki et al. [ | 4 females and 8 males without a familiarity with acupuncture | (1) Control | Acupressure | → |
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| Day et al. [ | 17 women and 14 men who were healthy and free of pain | Control | Conventional massage | → |
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| Agren et al. [ | 13–21 male Sprague-Dawley rats | Control | Conventional massage | Oxytocin-mediated† |
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| Turner et al. [ | 26 nulliparous women that cycle | (1) Positive emotion | Conventional massage | ↑ oxytocin |
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| Bello et al. [ | 14 males | Control | Conventional massage | ↑ oxytocin |
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| Morhenn et al. [ | 50 females and 45 males | Rest | Conventional massage | ↑ oxytocin |
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| Hernandez-Reif et al. | 13 women and 11 men with >6 months low back pain | Relaxation therapy | Conventional massage | ↑ dopamine |
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| Hernandez-Reif et al. | 34 women with stage 1 or 2 breast cancer | Control (medical treatment only) | Conventional massage | ↑ dopamine |
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| Field et al. [ | Review | Conventional massage | ↑ dopamine | |
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| Hart et al. [ | Nineteen women with anorexia nervosa | Control (standard treatment only) | Conventional massage | ↑ dopamine |
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| Lund et al. [ | 19 fibromyalgia patients | Guided relaxation | Conventional massage | ↑ corticotropin releasing factor |
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| Billhult et al. [ | 32 women with breast cancer | Attention | Conventional massage | ↑ oxytocin |
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| Tsuji et al. [ | 7 Japanese boys with Autism Spectrum Disorder and their mothers | Control (no massage, crossover) | Conventional massage | ↑ oxytocin |
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| Rapaport et al. [ | 29 females and 24 males | Light touch | Conventional massage | → oxytocin |
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| Rapaport et al. [ | 23 females and 22 males | Light touch | Conventional massage | ↑ oxytocin (acute) |
∗ denotes review; † denotes a conclusion inferred from naloxone or relevant antagonistic response.