BULIMIC ADOLESCENTS BENEFIT FROM MASSAGE THERAPY.
Field, Tiffany ; Schanberg, Saul ; Kuhn, Cynthia 等
ABSTRACT
Twenty-four female adolescent bulimic inpatients were randomly
assigned to a massage therapy or a standard treatment (control) group.
Results indicated that the massaged patients showed immediate reductions
(both self-report and behavior observation) in anxiety and depression.
In addition, by the last day of the therapy, they had lower depression
scores, lower cortisol (stress) levels, higher dopamine levels, and
showed improvement on several other psychological and behavioral
measures. These findings suggest that massage therapy is effective as an
adjunct treatment for bulimia.
Bulimia nervosa was originally thought to be a derivative of
anorexia, but it is now recognized as a disorder of its own. A diagnosis
of bulimia requires the following symptoms: (1) recurrent episodes of
binge eating; (2) a feeling of lack of control over eating behavior
during the binges; (3) regularly engaging in self-induced vomiting, use
of laxatives or diuretics, strict dieting or fasting, or vigorous
exercise in order to prevent weight gain; (4) an average of two or more
binge-eating episodes a week for at least three months; and (5)
persistent over-concern with body shape/weight (American Psychiatric
Association, 1987).
The exact etiology of bulimia nervosa has not yet been determined,
but the behaviors and symptoms presented by the majority of patients
suggest a combination of psychological, social, and physiological
factors. Depressed affect is so commonly seen that some believe bulimia
is simply a type of affective disorder. According to Edelstein, Haskew,
and Kramer (1989), 20-30% of patients with bulimia meet the diagnostic
criteria for depression. Bulimic patients who vomit show lower urinary
serotonin (Kaye, Ebert, & Gwirtsman, 1984), and elevated plasma
norepinephrine (Robinson, Checkley, & Russell, 1985; Smythe,
Bradshaw, & Vining, 1983).
Some have suggested that bulimics are difficult to medicate because
they do not keep the medication in their systems long enough to absorb
it. Nevertheless, significant decreases in bulimic and depressive
symptoms have been demonstrated for tricyclic antidepressants,
serotonergic agents, and MAO inhibitors. Investigators have found that
some bulimic patients who are not depressed respond to antidepressant
medication, and some who do suffer from depression may binge less while
remaining depressed (Brotman, Herzog, & Woods, 1984; Walsh, Stewart,
Roose, Gladis, & Glassman, 1984). Some of the relief experienced by
bulimic patients may be due to lowered anxiety and suppressed appetite
caused by tricyclic antidepressants rather than to the activity of the
antidepressant itself (Pope & Hudson, 1986).
These treatment approaches, however, have not been sufficient on
their own. To be successful, treatment must alleviate depressive
symptoms and alter any neuroendocrinological abnormalities. Massage
therapy has proven effective in these areas, namely reducing depression
and cortisol (Field, Morrow, Valdeon, Larson, Kuhn, & Schanberg,
1992). For example, massage has been found to lower both self-reported
and observed anxiety and depression as well as salivary cortisol levels
in a sample of depressed adolescents (Field et al., 1992).
Given these positive findings, it was hypothesized that massage
therapy would similarly be effective in decreasing depression, anxiety,
and cortisol levels with a sample of eating-disorder patients. In
addition, massage therapy was expected to reduce several other
psychological and behavioral traits common in these patients.
Psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy have been somewhat effective,
although the majority of patients have continuing eating problems
(Garfinkel, Moldofsky, & Garner, 1977; Hsu, 1986). The present study
sought to determine whether massage therapy is an effective adjunct.
METHOD
Sample
The subjects were 24 adolescent female bulimic inpatients at a
residential treatment center. The inclusion criterion was a DSM-III-R
diagnosis of bulimia nervosa: weight loss is usually present, amenorrhea is variable, vomiting/purging is normally present, as is fear of fatness
(Hsu, 1986). The patients ranged in age from 16 to 21 and came from
middle- to upper-SES (M = 2.2 on the Hollingshead Index) Hispanic (68%)
and non-Hispanic White (32%) families. The patients were randomly
assigned to a massage therapy or a standard treatment (control) group.
Procedure
Massage therapy. The massage therapy group received a massage 2
days a week for 5 weeks, for a total of 10 massages. The massages were
administered by massage therapists. The massage therapy covered several
parts of the body (which was fully clothed) and included 15 minutes in a
supine position and 15 minutes in a prone position. It consisted of
exerting traction upon the neck with the patient in a supine position,
followed by smooth strokes across the forehead, jaw, and face, and
depressing the shoulders. The therapist then exerted traction on each
arm, followed by massage of the hand and smooth strokes over the length
of the arm. The torso was gently rocked. The same movements used with
the arms and hands were applied to legs and feet. In a prone position,
the Achilles tendon was stretched and long strokes were made from the
hip to the toes. Also included were lateral lumbar stretching, strokes
from the back to the arms, trapezius and neck squeezing, friction
alongside the spine, sacral traction, and long, soothing strokes from
the head to the feet.
Standard treatment. All adolescents residing at the Renfrew
Treatment Center are evaluated by a psychiatrist to assess their goals
and identify a treatment plan. The adolescents then meet their primary
clinician and begin participating in daily small-group, individual,
family, and community therapy. In addition, they work with a registered
dietician to become more knowledgeable about nutrition and the basic
principles of physiology and metabolism. They also participate in
nonverbal therapies, such as movement therapy. In total, residents
attend 30 to 40 group therapy sessions per week.
Measures-Immediate Effects (Pre I Post Therapy Sessions)
The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI). The 20-item state scale
of the STAI (Spielberger, Gorsuch, & Lushene, 1970) measures how the
subject feels at that moment (e.g., "I feel: very nervous, nervous,
or not nervous"). This scale was administered immediately prior to
and again 30 minutes following the massage therapy on the first and last
days of the study. Research has demonstrated that the STAI has adequate
concurrent validity (Spielberger, 1972) and adequate internal
consistency (r = .83; Spielberger et al., 1970). In addition, scores
have been found to increase in response to stress and decrease under
relaxing conditions (Spielberger et al., 1970).
Profile of Mood States Depression Scale (POMS-D). The POMS Depression Scale (McNair, Lorr, & Droppleman, 1971) consists of 19
adjectives, rated on a 5-point scale ranging from not at all to
extremely, which reveal depressed mood "right now." The scale
has adequate concurrent validity and good internal consistency (r = .95;
McNair & Lorr, 1964) and is an adequate measure of intervention
effectiveness (Pugatch, Haskell, & McNair, 1969). This scale was
administered immediately prior to and again 30 minutes following the
massage therapy on the first and last days of the study.
Behavior Observation Scale (BOS). Behavior Observation Scale (Field
et al., 1992) ratings were made based on affect and anxiety observed
during the 30 minutes prior to massage therapy and the 30-minute period
after the session. Behaviors were coded at 30-second intervals by a
coder who was blind to the hypotheses of the study and the group
assignment of the subjects. The behaviors were rated on a 3-point scale
and then summed and averaged. Intercoder reliability (10 sessions) was
calculated using Cohen's Kappa to correct for chance agreement. BOS
ratings have reliably discriminated depressed and adjustment-disorder
children and adolescents before and after massage therapy (Field et al.,
1992) and relaxation therapy (Platania-Solazzo, Field, Blank, Seligman,
Kuhn, & Schanberg, 1992).
Salivary cortisol. Since cortisol levels in saliva reflect stress
levels 20 minutes prior to their sampling, samples were collected just
before massage therapy and ten minutes after the therapy. Salivary
cortisol samples were obtained by having subjects place a cotton swab
(dipped in lemonade-flavored crystals) along their gumline for
approximately 30 seconds. The swab was then placed in a syringe and the
plunger depressed to inject the saliva into a microcentrifuge tube,
which was sealed, frozen, and sent to Duke University to be assayed for
cortisol. Cortisol assays have proven to be an effective index of stress
(Field et al., 1992; Ironson et al., 1996) and were included because
stress levels are typically elevated in eating-disorder patients
(Robinson et al., 1985; Smythe et al., 1983).
Measures -- Longer-Term Effects (First Day/Last Day) Eating
Disorders Inventory (EDI). The 64-item EDI (Garner, Olmsted, &
Polivy, 1983) consists of eight subscales measuring psychological and
behavioral traits common in eating-disorder patients: drive for
thinness, bulimia, body dissatisfaction, ineffectiveness, perfectionism,
interpersonal distrust, interoceptive awareness, and maturity fears.
Items are answered on a 6-point scale ranging from always to never.
Criterion-related validity (patients correctly classified) has been
established for this scale (92%). In addition, the scale has very good
internal consistency (alpha = .90), and convergent/discriminant validity
has been demonstrated for each of the subscales (Garner et al., 1983).
Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). The
20-item OES-D (Radloff, 1977) assesses depressive symptomatology over
the past week. Scale items represent the major symptoms of depression as
identified by clinical judgment, frequency of use in other
questionnaires, and factor analytic studies. Responses are made on a
4-point scale (rarely or none of the time, some or little of the time, a
lot of the time, and most or all of the time). The CES-D has high
internal consistency (alpha = .86) and test-retest reliability. Validity
has been established though correlation with other self-report measures
and clinical ratings of depression (Radloff & Locke, 1986; Radloff,
1991).
Urine samples. Urine samples were collected from the subjects prior
to the end of the first and last days of therapy. An aliquot of each
sample was frozen and sent to Duke University to be assayed for
cortisol, serotonin (5-HIAA), creatinine, and catecholamines (norepinephrime, epinephrine, and dopamine). (See Kuhn, Schanberg,
Field, Symanski,' Zimmerman, Scafidi, & Roberts, 1991, for a
description of the procedure.) Although bulimics show depleted serotonin
(Kaye et al., 1984), they are noted to have elevated norepinephrine
levels (Robinson, Checkley, & Russell, 1985; Smythe, Bradshaw, &
Vining, 1983). In previous studies, massage therapy reduced
norepinephrine levels in depressed adolescents and increased serotonin
levels in stressed men (Ironson et al., 1996). Thus, decreased
norepinephrine and cortisol and increased serotonin Levels were expected
following massage therapy.
RESULTS
Immediate Effects (Pre/Post Therapy Sessions)
Repeated-measures analyses of variance by group (massage/control)
and post hoc Bonferroni t tests were conducted to assess the immediate
effects (pre/post) of the massage therapy sessions on the first and last
days of treatment. These analyses yielded interaction effects suggesting
that on both days the massage group reported significantly lower anxiety
and less depressed mood after therapy. On the first day (but not the
last), the massage group showed significantly less stress and was
observed to have more positive affect and less anxiety. There were no
significant effects for the control (standard treatment) group (see
Table 1).
Longer-Term Effects (First Day/Last Day)
Repeated-measures analyses of variance by group (massage/control)
and post hoc Bonferroni t tests were conducted to assess the longer-term
effects (first day/last day) of repeated massages. Significant
interaction effects were found (see Table 2). The massage group had
improved scores on the Eating Disorders Inventory subscales (drive for
thinness, bulimia, body dissatisfaction, ineffectiveness, perfectionism,
interpersonal distrust, interoceptive awareness, and maturity fears),
reported less depression, and had higher dopamine and lower cortisol
levels.
DISCUSSION
Both self-report and behavior observations revealed an immediate
decrease in anxiety and depression in these bulimic females after
massage sessions. It was surprising, therefore, that the salivary
cortisol levels decreased only slightly. However, the levels were
already very low at baseline, probably because sampling occurred late in
the afternoon when cortisol typically reaches its lowest level in the
diurnal cycle, making it difficult to decrease further. Yet, the
decrease in salivary cortisol from the first to last day and the
significant decrease in urinary cortisol suggest a notable decrease in
stress.
The convergence of measures, in this case the decreases in
depression and cortisol, is consistent with the behavioral findings.
Nonetheless, depression levels remained high, as might be expected,
since bulimia is considered a depressive disorder (Edelstein et al.,
1989). More intensive, longer-term massage therapy may be needed to
decrease depression further.
The significance of the increased dopamine levels is less clear,
although dopamine is often lower in depressed adults. Although serotonin
rose, the increase was not significant, and norepinephrine showed a
slight increase rather than a decrease.
Whether decreased depression contributed to improved attitudes
regarding their eating disorder or improved attitudes contributed to
less depression is also unclear. Nevertheless, massage therapy may have
raised the patients' awareness of their bodies, which some have
said is critical for resolving body perception dissonance (Vandereycken
& Meerman, 1984).
Massage therapy attenuated several major problems associated with
bulimia: anxiety, depression, neuroendocrinological abnormalities, and
poor self-image. Although more extensive studies are needed, these
results suggest that massage therapy is an effective adjunct to standard
treatment.
The authors would like to thank the adolescents who participated in
this study, the massage therapists from Educating Hands and the Florida
Institute of Massage Therapy, the staff at the Renfrew Treatment Center,
and Lia Haley, Olga Quintino, and Julie Malphurs for helping with data
collection. This research was supported by an NIMH Research Scientist
Award (#MH00331) and an NIMH Research Grant (#MH46586) to Tiffany Field,
and a grant from Johnson & Johnson to the Touch Research Institute.
Saul Schanberg, M.D., Ph.D., and Cynthia Kuhn, Ph.D., Duke
University Medical School.
Tory Field, Karen Fierro, Tanja Henteleff, and Cynthia Mueller,
Touch Research Institute, University of Miami School of Medicine.
Regina Yando, Ph.D., Harvard Medical School.
Seana Shaw, M.D., Department of Psychiatry, University of Miami
School of Medicine.
Iris Burman, Educating Hands Institute.
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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