ADOLESCENTS WITH ATTENTION DEFICIT HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER BENEFIT FROM MASSAGE THERAPY.
Field, Tiffany M. ; Quintino, Olga ; Hernandez-Reif, Maria 等
ABSTRACT
Twenty-eight adolescents with attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder were provided either massage therapy or relaxation therapy for
10 consecutive school days. The massage therapy group, but not the
relaxation therapy group, rated themselves as happier and observers
rated them as fidgeting less following the sessions. After the 2-week
period, their teachers reported more time on task and assigned them
lower hyperactivity scores based on classroom behavior.
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a condition
affecting as many as 3 to 6 percent of all youth, and is characterized
by developmentally inappropriate degrees of inattention, impulsiveness,
and hyperactivity. Overactivity is typically the most prominent feature
(DSM-III-R, American Psychiatric Association, 1987; Anderson, Williams,
McGee, & Silva, 1987).
Treatment is made more difficult by the comorbidity of ADHD with
other disorders, such as conduct disorder, anxiety, learning disability,
and depression (Biederman, Newcorn, & Spirch, 1991). Treatment
usually includes drug therapy and training parents and teachers in
behavior modification techniques. Drug therapy features
psychostimulants, such as methylphenidate or d-amphetamine, which alter
the concentration and physiology of catecholamines, namely dopamine
(Barkley, 1989; Evans, Gualtieri, & Hicks, 1986). This stimulates
the frontal and striatal regions of the brain, which are associated with
attention, arousal, and inhibition and help regulate these processes
(Evans et al., 1986). Although drug therapy improves ADHD symptoms in
over three-fourths of the cases, it is not a curative measure, its
effects lasting only as long as medication is taken. Another drawback of
drug therapy is the occasional side effects, such as appetite loss and
insomnia (Barkley, McMurray, & Edelbrock, 1990).
Behavior modification by parents and teachers involves such
techniques as adjusting the time, amplitude, and frequency of
consequences for the child's actions, rearranging home and
classroom settings to facilitate attention, breaking down tasks into
smaller subtasks that can be completed within the child's attention
span, and setting up schedules to aid the child in overcoming
organizational problems (DSM-III-R, American Psychiatric Association,
1987). Behavior modification is a way to adjust the surroundings to
facilitate the ADHD child's performance. However, as with drug
therapies, behavior modification is only effective during the time that
it is administered.
Alternative forms of therapy, namely massage therapy and relaxation
therapy, were investigated in the present study because they have been
effective with children and adolescents with attention problems. For
example, relaxation therapy (Platania-Solazzo, Field, Blank, Seligman,
Kuhn, Schanberg, & Saab, 1992) and massage therapy (Field, Morrow,
Valdeon, Larson, Kuhn, & Schanberg, 1992) were found to reduce
anxiety and activity levels in child and adolescent psychiatric
patients. In addition, following massage they had more organized sleep
and lower stress hormone (cortisol and norepinephrine) levels. Massage
therapy has also been noted to decrease off-task behavior in children
diagnosed as autistic (Field, Lasko, Mundy, Henteleff, Talpins, &
Dowling, 1996). It was hypothesized here that massage therapy would
lower the activity level of adolescents with ADHD.
METHOD
Subjects
Twenty-eight adolescents (mean age = 14.6 years) were recruited
from self-contained classrooms for emotionally disturbed adolescents.
All subjects were male, 90% were middle socioeconomic status, 29% were
nonwhite Hispanic, and 71% were white. All were diagnosed with ADHD
according to DSM-III-R criteria. They were randomly assigned to massage
therapy or relaxation therapy based on a stratification procedure to
ensure equivalence between groups on background variables.
Procedure
Massage therapy. Fourteen subjects received a 15-minute massage
after school for 10 consecutive school days. The massage consisted of
moderate pressure and smooth strokes for 5 minutes in each of three
regions: up and down the neck, from the neck across the shoulders and
back to the neck, and from the neck to the waist and back to the neck
along the vertebral column. The 15-minute sequence was composed of 30
back-and-forth strokes per region, at 10 seconds each.
Relaxation therapy. Fourteen subjects participated in 15-minute
relaxation sessions after school for 10 consecutive school days. During
the progressive muscle relaxation sessions, a therapist asked the
adolescents to tense and relax the same body parts that were massaged in
the massage therapy group.
Assessments. Pre/post therapy session measures included the Happy
Face Scale, completed by the adolescents, and an assessment of fidgeting
based on a behavioral observation made by an observer who was blind to
the adolescents' group assignment. The Happy Face Scale is a series
of 5 drawings, ranging from unhappy to happy faces, which is used as a
"barometer" to depict the adolescents' feelings before
and after the sessions. Fidgeting, one of the most characteristic
problems of this group of adolescents, was rated on a 3-point scale.
Interrater reliability for the fidgeting behavior was determined for
one-third of the sessions (kappa = .83).
First day/last day assessments included self-report measures of
depression and empathy, since depression and antisocial behavior are
often comorbid with ADHD (Biederman et al., 1991). The 20-question
Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D; Radloff, 1977)
was used to rate depressive symptoms over the past week. The Empathy
Scale (Bryant, 1982) required the adolescents to indicate whether they
agreed or disagreed with each of 22 statements designed to tap empathy,
defined as the ability to take another person's perspective (e.g.,
"It's hard for me to see why someone else gets upset").
Teachers' assessments included observed time on task in the
classroom and the Conners Rating Scales (Conners, 1985), which were
administered on the first and last days. The 10-item Conners
Hyperactivity scale identifies behavior problems in children 3 to 17
years old.
RESULTS
Analyses of variance with pre/postsession and first/last day of
treatment as repeated measures were performed. Table 1 reveals that (1)
the massage therapy group selected happier faces after the sessions on
both the first and last days of the treatment; (2) the massage therapy
group demonstrated less fidgeting after the sessions; and (3) no
significant pre/postsession changes were noted for the relaxation
therapy group. Repeated measures analyses of variance yielded the
following first day/last day changes: (1) the massage therapy
adolescents averaged more time on task in the classroom as observed by
their teachers; (2) the massage therapy group received significantly
better scores on the Conners scale; (3) no significant changes were
noted on the depression or empathy scales; and (4) no changes were noted
on any of the measures for the relaxation therapy group.
DISCUSSION
While drug therapy and behavior modification techniques are
commonly employed to treat ADHD, two alternative therapies, relaxation
and massage therapy, were investigated here. The positive effects of
massage therapy were perhaps not surprising inasmuch as that
intervention has helped reduce depression and anxiety levels as well as
stress hormones in child and adolescent psychiatric patients (Field et
al., 1992) and has enhanced on-task behavior in autistic children (Field
et al., 1996). Although the comorbid problems of depression and lack of
empathy were not altered in this study, the adolescents reported feeling
better (happier) after their massage sessions, and they were observed to
fidget less. Longer term effects were reported by their teachers,
including more time on task in the classroom and lower Conners
Hyperactivity scores.
Since hyperactivity, not depression, is the salient problem in
ADHID, it is interesting that hyperactivity was uniquely reduced in this
study. Although the underlying mechanism for the massage therapy/lesser
activity relationship is not known, increased serotonin levels noted in
other studies of massage (Field et al., 1996; Ironson et al., 1996)
might help modulate elevated dopamine levels noted in ADHD youth
(Rogeness, Javors, & Pliszka, 1992). Future studies might assay
dopamine levels as well as its known regulators, norepinephrine and
serotonin.
Although relaxation therapy has also been effective with depressed
adolescents (Platania-Solazzo et at, 1992), no changes were noted in the
present study. The lack of effects may relate to the fact that several
adolescents reported not enjoying the relaxation therapy. This more
active form of therapy was called "hard work" by those who
complained.
Massage therapy could become an important tool in the management of
ADHD, in conjunction with currently used therapies. It may, for example,
potentiate methylphenidate and other drugs or complement behavior
modification. In cases where present therapies are not effective or are
accompanied by undersirable side effects, massage therapy could be a
substitute treatment for children and adolescents diagnosed with ADHD.
This research was supported by an NIMH Research Scientist Award
(#MH00331) and an NIMH Basic Research Grant (#MH46586) to Tiffany Field.
Olga Quintino, Maria Hernandez-Reif, and Gabrielle Koslovsky, Touch
Research Institute, University of Miami School of Medicine.
Reprint requests to Tiffany Field, Ph.D., Touch Research Institute,
University of Miami School of Medicine, P.O. Box 016820, Miami, Florida
33101.
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(1987). DSM-III disorders in preadolescent children: Prevalence in a
large sample from the general population. Archives of General
Psychiatry, 44, 69-76.
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