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Magnet
Therapy Shows Limited Potential for Pain Relief
February
23, 2001 -- -- University of Virginia researchers published results
from one of the first clinical research studies conducted on magnet
therapy for pain in today's issue of the Journal of Alternative
and Complementary Medicine. Although the results of the study were
inconclusive, magnet therapy reduced fibromyalgia pain intensity
enough in one group of study participants to be "clinically meaningful,"
the researchers said.
The
study was conducted with partial support from a grant from the National
Institutes of Health Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.
Three
measures of pain were used: functional status reported by study
participants on a standardized fibromyalgia questionnaire used nationwide,
number of tender points on the body and pain intensity ratings.
Data were compiled for 94 fibromyalgia patients randomly divided
into four groups. One control group received sham pads containing
magnets that had been demagnetized through heat processing. The
second control group received only their usual treatment for fibromyalgia.
Two other groups received active magnetic pads: one group used Pad
A, which provided whole-body exposure to a low, uniformly static
magnetic field of negative polarity. The other used Pad B, which
exposed subjects to a low static magnetic field that varied spatially
and in polarity. The subjects were treated and tracked for six months.
"When
we compared the groups, we did not find significant statistical
differences in most of the outcome measures," said Ann Gill Taylor,
R.N., Ed.D., co-investigator for the study, professor of nursing
and director and principal investigator of the Center for Study
of Complementary and Alternative Therapies at the University of
Virginia. "However, we did find a statistically significant difference
in pain intensity reduction for one of the active magnet pad groups.
The two groups that slept on pads with active magnets generally
showed the greatest improvements in outcome scores of pain intensity
level, number of tender points on the body and functional status
after six months."
Pad
A group exhibited a consistent improvement across all four outcome
measures at three and six months. Pad B group showed an improvement
in all outcomes at three months, and these improved scores were
maintained at six months. The sham pad group and the group receiving
only usual care did not exhibit the same improvements.
The
magnetic fields of the mattresses were tested thoroughly to quantify
how much exposure, or dosage, study participants were receiving,
the researchers said.
"Finding
any positive results in the groups using the magnets was surprising,
given how little we know about how magnets work to reduce pain,"
said the study's principal investigator Dr. Alan P. Alfano, assistant
professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation and medical director
of the U.Va. HealthSouth Rehabilitation Hospital. "The results tell
us maybe this therapy works, and that maybe more research is justified.
You can't draw final conclusions from only one study."
"To
our knowledge, no other studies on magnet therapy have been done
in as rigorous a clinical setting as U.Va., and this study was the
largest conducted so far," Taylor said. "Nevertheless, larger studies
are needed to find clear answers about magnets' safety and efficacy
in treating pain."
"Fibromyalgia
is a common rheumatological condition for which there is no generally
effective treatment," Alfano said. "People who have fibromyalgia
try everything and magnetic mattress pads are one of the most popular
complementary products they try. We did this study because we hoped
to provide some useful information for them.
"In
the past decade, people in this country have been using magnets
for everything from tennis elbow to carpal tunnel syndrome. They
want to do something for their pain that doesn't involve medication
or injections, and magnets seem relatively benign. But people don't
know how to evaluate magnetic products when considering what to
buy. There are no standards for magnets yet. So researchers need
to find out what dosage, field strength and period of exposure is
proper, what side effects may occur and what conditions benefit
most," Alfano said.
Two
other basic science laboratory studies currently underway at U.Va.
are investigating the effects of pulsed and static magnetic fields
on neural processes and functions and the effects of magnetic fields
on microvascular capillary blood flow.
CONTACT:
Catherine Seigerman, (804) 924-5679
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