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The Why? To Massage For Health
& Fitness:
For the whole body to be healthy, -- the cells -- must be
healthy. The individual cells of the body are dependent on an
abundant supply of blood and lymph because these fluids supply
nutrients and oxygen and carry away wastes and toxins. Good
circulation is so important to our health and this is why
massage can be so beneficial for the entire body due to its
effect on circulation alone.
The relationship of stress and illness is of interest to anyone
maintaining their health. We all have stress in our daily lives
relating to work, family, environment, society. Mental tensions,
frustrations, and insecurity are among the most damaging. Stress
causes the release of hormones that create vasoconstriction --
vessel shrinking -- and reduced circulation. Affected by stress,
the heart works harder, breathing becomes rapid and shallow, and
digestion slows. Nearly every body process is degraded.
Psychosomatic studies show how stress factors can cause
migraines, hypertension, depression, some peptic ulcers, etc.
Researchers have estimated that 80% of disease is stress
related. Soothing and relaxing massage therapy can help by
counteracting stress effects.
Massage has a definite psychological effect. Since massage
animates the tactile sense, the body's primary sense, it brings
people into the here and now and away from tension generated by
constant preoccupation with problems. Also, loosening of muscle
tension or "armoring" -- the physical counterpart to how we
defend and protect ourselves from psychological pain -- can lead
to freeing of repressed emotions.
Massage is also been documented by many to:
Cause changes in the blood. The oxygen capacity of the blood can
increase 10-15% after massage. Affect muscles throughout the
body. Massage can help loosen contracted, shortened muscles and
can stimulate weak, flaccid muscles. This muscle "balancing" can
help posture and promote more efficient movement. Massage does
not directly increase muscle strength, but it can speed recovery
from the fatigue that occurs after exercise. In this way, it can
be possible to do more exercise and training, which in the long
run strengthens muscles and improves conditioning. Massage also
provides a gentle stretching action to both the muscles and
connective tissues that surround and support the muscles and
many other parts of the body, which helps keep these tissues
elastic.
Increase the body's secretions and excretions. There is an
increase in the production of gastric juices, saliva, and urine.
There is also increased excretion of nitrogen, inorganic
phosphorus, and sodium chloride (salt). This suggests that the
metabolic rate (the utilization of absorbed material by the
body’s cells) increases.
Affect the nervous system. Massage balances the nervous system
by soothing or stimulating it, depending on which effect is
needed by the individual at the time of the massage.
Enhance skin condition. Massage directly improves the function
of the sebaceous (oil) and sweat glands which keep the skin
lubricated, clean, cooled. Tough, inflexible skin can become
softer and more supple.
Affect internal organs. By indirectly or directly stimulating
nerves that supply internal organs, blood vessels of these
organs dilate and allow greater blood supply to them.
Users of massage therapy as a healing tool quickly realize that
they have found a form of drugless therapy. Headaches, insomnia,
digestive disorders including constipation and spastic colon,
arthritis, asthma, carpal tunnel syndrome, sinusitis, and minor
aches and pains are some of the problems that can respond to
massage therapy. Massage can have an excellent effect on nervous
people who have been dependent on their pharmacy for rest and
relaxation.
Massage also aids recovery from soft tissue injuries such as
sprains and strains. This is possible because the growth and
repair of tissue are accelerated by efficient circulation in the
injured areas and appropriate stimulation of the healing
tissues. Many soft tissue injuries are not serious enough to
cause one to visit a doctor or hospital for treatment, or are
only treated with some first-aid, but still cause some
discomfort and disability. Massage therapy can often help speed
and improve recovery and reduce discomfort from such mishaps. In
this way, massage helps bridge the gap between common neglect of
injury and major medical intervention.
What takes place under a massage therapist's hands has profound
importance for those interested in health and fitness -- in
"tuning up" their bodies. In every sport or form of exercise,
massage can help to reduce physiological fatigue and aid
recovery from the exertion of working out or playing. Massage
enables training better, with longer, more effective workouts,
thus facilitating better performance and preventing injury.
The people of ancient Mediterranean civilizations knew this.
After bathing and exercise, they included a full body massage.
The ancients understood that education involves equal
development of mind and body. The modern public’s interest in
physical fitness, holistic health, wellness and human potential
represents the elevated awareness of our age for natural
approaches to health.
For most people embarking on a fitness program, often the spirit
is willing but the flesh is not. When regular exercise is begun
almost every part of the body changes. Of interest to massage
therapists is the way blood vessels become more intricate in
order to meet the body’s demand for more oxygen, to supply more
nutrients, to permit more elimination. This takes time. While
the muscles are getting into shape, they have trouble getting
enough oxygen and nutrients, and wastes back up and stagnate.
Unfortunately, many exercise programs regard aches and pains as
the inevitable price to be paid. This is simply not true because
massage can be used as the Greeks and Romans used it -- to
increase endurance, control fatigue, and feel better as part of
a regular health program.
Massage acts to disperse the accumulated by-products of muscle
action that irritate muscles and nerve endings. Lactic and
carbonic acids build up in muscle tissue shortly after exercise
begins. These acids are waste products that contribute to
causation of the pain and occasional cramping that exercisers,
athletes, dancers, etc. suffer during and/or after workouts or
performing. These acids are formed when the glycogen stored in
the liver and muscles is burned to produce the energy expended
during exercise. The acids must eventually be reconverted to
glycogen and stored again, or drained out via the lymph and
circulatory systems. Pain and fatigue persists until this
process of reconverting or excreting is completed. Massage can
help eliminate the irritation caused by these wastes, thus
increasing muscle recovery rates. When massage has been
substituted for rest, an increase from 20-75%, even 100% muscle
recovery has been recorded. For example, this is why boxers are
massaged rather than rested between rounds.
Joints are critical to exercise because joints are moved by the
muscles to produce movement. All joints are complicated, and
their parts have a way of settling and stiffening when not used.
A sluggish, numbed feeling in the joints discourages exercise. A
massage therapist counteracts this by using massage strokes and
passive movement to release the muscle tension and free the
connective tissue found around the joints that can bind the
joints.
Increased health awareness has also increased nutrition
awareness. The most carefully planned diet is partly wasted if
blood vessels are not developed and open so that nutrition can
reach the cells. Massage can aid internal nutrition rates by
improving circulation.
The theories of therapeutic massage are scientific in character,
but the actual application of these theories is an art, for it
involves the healing sense, sensitivity of touch, insight, and
intuition. It is a unique way of communicating without words,
sharing energy, enjoying pleasurable relaxation, and
experiencing peace of mind. Massage is often attributed to have
ethereal spiritual effects akin to those of meditation.
The past ten years or so have seen a proliferation of different
terms, titles, and systems of massage such as: Therapeutic,
Holistic, Swedish, Sports, Neuromuscular, Bodywork, Oriental,
Shiatsu, Acupressure, Esalen, Reichian, Polarity, Reflexology,
etc. For the sake of clarity, the term massage or massage
therapy as used in this article refers to the scientific
manipulation of the soft tissues. The thing to keep in mind is
that every healing art that employs massage therapy should
include some form of kneading, pressing, or stroking with the
use of pressure and movement, no matter how slight the touch or
how often it is used.
Whenever interviewing a massage therapist you should always feel
comfortable asking if they have graduated from a school that is
accredited. They should display their license if licensing is
required in your area (as of 7/11/97, 25 states and D.C.
regulate massage therapists), are nationally certified by the
National Certification Board for Therapeutic Massage and
Bodywork (this is the only professional certification program
that has been recognized by an independent, outside agency),
belong to a credible professional association with a background
knowledge of the types and styles of massage used.
At the University of
Miami School of Medicine's Touch Research Institute, 55 studies on
touch, the majority on massage therapy have been published or are
under way. And, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) ‹ the
government agency that oversees and conducts medical research in the
United States, opened an Office of Alternative Medicine in 1992, which
has funded several studies on the benefits of massage. More
research is under way.
Among research
findings so far:
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Office
workers massaged regularly were more alert, performed better and
were less stressed than those who weren't massaged. |
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Massage
therapy decreased the effects of anxiety, tension, depression,
pain, and itching in burn patients. |
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Abdominal
surgery patients recovered more quickly after massage. |
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Premature
infants who were massaged gained more weight and fared better than
those who weren't. |
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Autistic
children showed less erratic behavior after massage therapy. |
Whether seeking relief for
a medical condition, searching for a method to help deal with the stresses
of daily life or wanting to maintain good health, more and more
Americans are turning to therapeutic massage.
Massage doesn't just feel good,
research shows it reduces the heart rate, lowers blood pressure,
increases blood circulation and lymph flow, relaxes muscles, improves
range of motion, and increases endorphins, the body's natural
painkillers. Therapeutic massage enhances medical treatment and
helps people feel less anxious and stressed, relaxed yet more alert.
A national survey conducted by the
State University of New York at Syracuse found 54 percent of primary
care physicians and family practitioners said they would encourage their
patients to pursue massage therapy as a treatment, and a third of those
said they are willing to refer patients to a massage therapist.
A study in 1994 at the Middlesex
Hospital, London, of 100 patients recovering from cardiac surgery,
revealed that a 20 minute foot massage lowered anxiety rates, decreased
pain, and reduced tension. Massage is a great way to improve the
physical and emotional well-being of cancer patients. Reducing pain,
nausea and tension, less anxious, more relaxed, and were more mobile
after receiving massages. I believe that massage should be part of every
health care program, irrespective of the disease in order to help
improve the quality of life.
Physical
Benefits of Therapeutic Massage:
Physical Benefits of Massage:
A tremendous help in overcoming depression
Helps relieve stress and aids relaxation
Helps relieve muscle tension and stiffness
Helps to improve posture
Helps to reduce muscle spasms
Helps to reduce blood pressure
Enhances athletic performance
Helps to reduce pain and swelling
Promotes deeper and easier breathing
Helps strengthens the immune system
Enhances the health and nourishment of skin
Enhances capacity for calm thinking and creativity
Provides greater joint flexibility and range of motion
Improves circulation of blood and movement of lymph fluids
Fosters faster healing of strained muscles and sprained ligaments
Helps relieve tension-related headaches and effects of eye-strain
Emotional
Benefits of Therapeutic Massage:
Fosters peace of mind
Reduces levels of anxiety
Helps relieve mental stress
Fosters a feeling of well-being
Satisfies needs for caring nurturing touch
Improves ability to monitor stress signals
Promotes a relaxed state of mental alertness
Increases awareness of mind-body connection
Helps to reduce formation of excessive scar tissue
There also is a growing trend of
offering therapeutic massage in the workplace. Your employer may
be among those who have learned that massage therapy isn't just a perk,
but actually increases employee productivity and morale.
According to a 1996 survey of employees
who regularly receive therapeutic massage on-site at Reebok
International Ltd., 98 percent said it helped them reduce work-related
stress; 92 percent said it increased alertness, motivation and
productivity; 83 percent said it had in some cases sufficiently
addressed a problem so medical attention was not necessary; and 66
percent said it had enabled them to stay at work when they would have
otherwise gone home sick.
Health insurance companies and HMOs,
realizing the cost savings of therapeutic massage, are increasingly
covering or reimbursing massage when it is prescribed or provided by
authorized professionals.
Therapeutic massage involves the
manipulation of the soft tissue structures of the body to prevent and
alleviate pain, discomfort, muscle spasm, and stress; and, to promote
health and wellness. AMTA defines massage therapy as a profession in
which the practitioner applies manual techniques, and may apply
adjunctive therapies, with the intention of positively affecting the
health and well-being of the client.
Massage therapy improves functioning of
the circulatory, lymphatic, muscular, skeletal, and nervous systems and
may improve the rate at which the body recovers from injury and illness.
Massage involves holding, causing movement of soft tissue, and/or
applying pressure to the body. It comes in many forms, including:
Swedish
a gentle, relaxing massage;
Pressure
point therapy for certain conditions or injuries
Sports
massage which focuses on muscle groups relevant to the
particular sport.
People find that
therapeutic massage can help with a wide range of medical conditions,
including:
allergies, anxiety,
arthritis: (both
Osteoarthritis and Rheumatoid arthritis)
asthma
and bronchitis, carpal
tunnel syndrome, chronic
and temporary pain
circulatory
problems, depression, digestive
disorders:
including spastic colon, constipation and diarrhea, headache,
especially when due to muscle tension, insomnia. myofascial
pain (a condition of the tissue connecting the muscles) reduced
range of motion, sinusitis,
sports
injuries:
including pulled or strained muscles and sprained
ligaments, stress, temporomandibular
joint dysfunction (TMJ)
Although massage therapy does not
increase muscle strength, it can stimulate weak, inactive muscles and,
thus, partially compensate for the lack of exercise and inactivity
resulting from illness or injury. It also can hasten and lead to a
more complete recovery from exercise or injury.
Therapeutic massage can be
inappropriate in some cases, such as in people with:
inflammation
of the veins (phlebitis), infectious
diseases, certain
forms of cancer,
some
skin conditions, some
cardiac problems
If you have one of these or some other
diagnosed medical condition, always check with your doctor before
seeking a massage. Research on the effects of massage therapy has been
ongoing for more than 120 years. A surge in research over the past 20
years has resulted in more than 100 published studies.
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