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The clinical effectiveness of therapeutic massage for musculoskeletal pain: a systematic review
Lewis M, Johnson MI
Physiotherapy 2006 Sep;92(3):146-158
systematic review

OBJECTIVES: To determine the effectiveness of therapeutic massage (TM) for the symptomatic relief of musculoskeletal pain, and to analyse TM intervention protocols used in studies. DESIGN: Systematic review of randomised controlled clinical trials and experimental studies on healthy human participants. PARTICIPANTS: Patients with musculoskeletal pain and healthy participants with post-exercise pain and soreness. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Comparisons of TM with: (i) no treatment; (ii) sham interventions; and (iii) active (standard) treatment. Outcome was dichotomised as effective (TM > comparison group) or not effective (TM <= comparison group). RESULTS: Twenty studies (1,341 participants) met the criteria for review. TM was superior to no treatment in five out of 10 comparisons, superior to sham (laser) treatment in one out of two comparisons, and superior to active treatment in seven out of 22 comparisons. TM was superior to comparison groups in six out of 11 studies using patients with musculoskeletal pain, and in three out of seven studies using patients with low back pain. TM was superior to comparison groups in four out of nine studies using healthy participants experiencing post-exercise pain and soreness. There were no relationships between study outcome and the TM regimen used. CONCLUSIONS: The available evidence is inconclusive. A combination of inadequate sample sizes, low methodological quality and insufficient TM dosing is likely to have contributed to the confused evidence base.

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A brief summary and a critical assessment of this review may be available at DARE