Our Sponsors

« Marijuana derived painkiller seeks FDA approval. | Main | Tai Chi helps ease Parkinson's Disease Symptoms. »
Wednesday
Feb152012

New Research: How Massage Heals Sore Muscles (NY TIMES)

A recent article in the New York Times highlights that there are still many common and accepted age old practices that have benefits that until recently have not been able to be fully explained by research and science. Something as simple as massaging sore muscles now has some hard evidence of it's benifits. 

from the NY TIMES: 

Their experiment required having people exercise to exhaustion and undergo five incisions in their legs in order to obtain muscle tissue for analysis. Despite the hurdles, the scientists still managed to find 11 brave young male volunteers. The study was published in the Feb. 1 issue of Science Translational Medicine.

On a first visit, they biopsied one leg of each subject at rest. At a second session, they had them vigorously exercise on a stationary bicycle for more than an hour until they could go no further. Then they massaged one thigh of each subject for 10 minutes, leaving the other to recover on its own. Immediately after the massage, they biopsied the thigh muscle in each leg again. After allowing another two-and-a-half hours of rest, they did a third biopsy to track the process of muscle injury and repair.

Vigorous exercise causes tiny tears in muscle fibers, leading to an immune reaction — inflammation — as the body gets to work repairing the injured cells. So the researchers screened the tissue from the massaged and unmassaged legs to compare their repair processes, and find out what difference massage would make.

They found that massage reduced the production of compounds called cytokines, which play a critical role in inflammation. Massage also stimulated mitochondria, the tiny powerhouses inside cells that convert glucose into the energy essential for cell function and repair. “The bottom line is that there appears to be a suppression of pathways in inflammation and an increase in mitochondrial biogenesis,” helping the muscle adapt to the demands of increased exercise, said the senior author, Dr. Mark A. Tarnopolsky.

 

 

Read the full original article here: 

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/02/06/how-massage-heals-sore-muscles/

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend