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The Effect of Massage on the Cardiac Autonomic Nervous System and Markers of Inflammation in Night Shift Workers: a Pilot Randomized Crossover Trial

Authors :
Fazeli, Mir Sohail
Pourrahmat, Mir-Masoud
Massah, Golshan
Lee, Kelsey
Lavoie, Pascal M.
Fazeli, Mirfarhang
Esser, Alison
Collet, Jean-Paul
Source :
International Journal of Therapeutic Massage & Bodywork
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Multimed Inc., 2020.

Abstract

Background Shift work is a necessary part of many industries; however, it can have detrimental effects on health over time. Purpose This study investigated the effect of a massage intervention on the cardiac autonomic activity and blood inflammatory markers of healthy medical residents working night shifts. Setting This trial was conducted at British Columbia Children’s and Women’s Hospital between February 2014 and June 2016. Participants Included participants were generally healthy medical residents and were working rotating night shifts on a regular basis. Research Design This was a randomized, controlled, crossover, open-label trial (NCT02247089). Interventions Participants received either a 30-min massage intervention or reading control after consecutive periods of night shift. Main Outcome Measures The primary outcome was high frequency, a proxy for the cardiac parasympathetic activity, measured via heart rate variability. Secondary outcomes included other heart rate variability measures, blood markers of inflammation, and blood pressure. Results Twelve participants were recruited (nine female) with median age of 28 years. There was no significant difference between the massage intervention and the reading control for the primary outcome, (median relative change between pre- and postmassage [interquartile range]: 62% [−1 to 150], pre- and postreading: 14% [−10 to 51], p = .16). Similarly, there was no difference with respect to blood inflammatory markers and blood pressure. Median high frequency significantly increased between pre- and postmassage (185 vs. 358 ms2, p = .04). Conclusion This pilot study found no statistically significant difference between the massage intervention and the reading control; however, we did observe a significant increase in median high frequency from before massage to after massage, indicative of increased parasympathetic activity. This study may help inform planning of larger trials evaluating massage interventions on the activity of the autonomic nervous system and managing shift work stress.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1916257X and 02247089
Volume :
13
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Therapeutic Massage & Bodywork
Accession number :
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