Tai Chi May Ease Arthritis Pain
Review of Tai Chi Studies Shows Small but
Positive Effect
By Miranda Hitti
WebMD Health News
Reviewed by Louise Chang
June 4, 2009 -- Practicing the traditional Chinese
martial art tai chi may
reduce arthritis pain
and disability.
That's according to a new research review, published in the June 15 edition
of Arthritis Care & Research.
The reviewers pooled data from seven studies. Five of the
studies included people with osteoarthritis, a sixth study focused on people
with rheumatoid arthritis,
and the seventh study included people with chronic tension headaches.
Besides their usual medical care, some patients took weekly tai chi classes.
For comparison, other patients didn't get tai chi instruction.
The studies varied in the type of tai chi that was taught and the tai chi
class schedule. Classes lasted for six to 15 weeks and involved one to three
weekly classes, depending on the study.
The review shows a drop of 10 points, on a scale of 0-100 points, in the
self-reported pain and disability scores of arthritis patients after taking tai
chi. Those patients also reported less tension and more satisfaction with their
health, compared to patients who didn't take tai chi.
That amounts to a "small positive effect," write the reviewers, who included
Amanda Hall, MPE, of Australia's University of Sydney. Hall's team notes that
the quality of the tai chi studies was "low" and that they didn't have enough
data to draw conclusions about tai chi's effect on other types of pain.
SOURCE:
Hall, A. Arthritis Care & Research, June 15, 2009; vol 61: pp 717-724.
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