woman gets massage
Prostock-studio/Shutterstock

Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)

Article Abstracts
Dec 23, 2019

Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)

Massage Therapy Can Reduce Pain and Increase Healing

Article Abstracts
Nov 25, 2024

Post-surgical pain may last two to three months and can affect mood, sleep, and other cornerstones of mental and physical health.

Surgery doesn’t just lead to acute pain at the incision site or surrounding areas. Patients may adopt new ways of moving to compensate for the initial discomfort, causing disruptions to joint and muscle alignment.  

“With any invasive procedure to the body, tissues are broken down and they have to get back to normal,” explains Daniel Vaccaro, a massage therapist from Norwalk, Connecticut. Research shows massage therapy can reduce inflammation and heal scar tissue, helping patients regain full range of motion. 

Abdominal surgeries can be performed on a variety of organs, such as the reproductive organs, stomach, gallbladder, intestine, appendix, liver, spleen, or esophagus. Patients can develop muscle inhibition or develop painful scar tissue, which massage therapy can correct or relieve. 

Hip arthroplasty involves a several-inch incision over the hip joint to replace worn or arthritic hips. Manual calf massage can contribute to a lower incidence of deep vein thromboembolism, a common complication of hip replacement surgery. 

Massage helps patients with chronic low-back pain, suggesting that massage therapy acts similarly to anti-inflammatory pain drugs. Regardless of the type of surgery a patient has received, the combination of massage therapy and pain medication is deemed more effective than drugs alone. Pain, anxiety, and stress are often byproducts of the experience, and massage therapy significantly targets these aftereffects.

Anything massage therapists can do to help manage patient stress may improve outcomes since high stress levels reduce our wound healing abilities and dampen immune function. 

 

REFERENCES

Salamon, M. (2018, April 24). Helping patients after surgery. American Massage Therapy Association. Retrieved from https://www.amtamassage.org/articles/3/MTJ/detail/3834/helping-patients-after-surgery

Advanced Search on this topic

Other Articles in this category

Aug 13, 2024 | Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)
Join us for an enlightening episode of the Egg Meets Sperm Podcast featuring the esteemed Dr. Tricia Pingel as we delve into the topic of "From…
Jul 08, 2024 | Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)
  Join us for an enlightening episode of the Egg Meets Sperm Podcast featuring the distinguished Dr. Joel Warsh as we delve into the topic of "One…
Jun 13, 2023 | Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)
Summer is here and more of us are going outdoors to play and relax. Sadly, this also means we are increasingly exposed to situations which can harm…
Jun 06, 2023 | Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM)
Lion’s breath is an ancient yoga breathing technique that may help alleviate stress and anxiety. Known in Sanskrit as simha pranayama, lion’s breath…

Customer Service

KnoWEwell News Updates