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Effect of Massage and Progressive Relaxation Exercises on Primary Dysmenorrhea

M

Mersin University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Primary Dysmenorrhea

Treatments

Other: progressive relaxation exercises and massage

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04356131
pain management

Details and patient eligibility

About

A total of 97 female students, 50 in the intervention group and 47 in the control group, were included in this pretest-posttest design randomized controlled study. Massage and progressive relaxation exercises are self-administered practices that are easy to adopt, with no side effects, and have beneficial effects on pain, sweating, fatigue, and gastrointestinal and central nervous system signs. So, it can be asserted that when applied together, massage and progressive relaxation exercises could be more effective in reducing menstrual symptoms than applying them separately.

Full description

Dysmenorrhea is one of the most frequent problems during menstruation and described as periodic and painful pelvis menstruation among women at reproductive age. It is classified as primary and secondary dysmenorrhea. Primary dysmenorrhea (PD) is defined as suprapubic pelvis pain with cramps that begin a couple hours before menstrual bleeding, after menstrual bleeding, or during the last 12-72 hours of menstruation and occur repeatedly without organic pathology. PD is associated with an increase in prostaglandin production in the endometrium, which causes pain by increasing uterine contractions in the suprapubic region. According to De Sanctis et al., PD prevalence varies between 16% and 93%. It is often seen with sweating, fatigue, gastrointestinal system signs (lack of appetite, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea), and central nervous system signs (dizziness, headache, syncope, and lack of concentration). These symptoms that occur just before or just after menstrual bleeding among women with normal pelvic anatomy may prevent them from attending school and work or joining social activities. Secondary dysmenorrhea is defined as menstrual pain caused by a pathology in the pelvis such as endometriosis. If a patient has pain for 3-6 months, a more comprehensive evaluation of chronic pelvic pain should be performed to evaluate the potential etiologies of secondary dysmenorrhea.

The international literature includes oral contraceptive, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory, and sedative drugs for the treatment of primary dysmenorrhea. However, the fact that some of these drugs cause side effects such as indigestion, headache, drowsiness, and substance addiction causes individuals to remain indifferent to them. In Turkey, it is reported that women prefer their family members as the first source of information and therefore use individual methods (massage, herbal teas, hot application, lying down, sweet food consumption, etc.) rather than pharmacological treatments due to cultural differences in coping with PD. Complementary and integrated therapy approaches, which are widely used all over the world today, have become common in coping with gynecological disorders among women in recent years. Some studies state that PD can be cured using such complementary therapies as essential oil acids, vitamins, acupuncture, herbal medicines, aromatherapy, reflexology, acupressure, massage, sports, and exercise. However, ACOG emphasizes that although these methods are frequently used by patients, they have not been studied enough yet, and mostly supports the use of exercise, high-frequency transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, and topical heat to help manage dysmenorrhea symptoms. Research on PD has applied massage and exercise practices using different application protocols. Studies on massage applications have examined the effect of inhaling herbal essential oils alone or together with massage. Research solely on exercise has examined the effectiveness of long-term and regular exercise, although with various practices. However, it can be said that massage and progressive relaxation exercises are more advantageous than other methods because they are easy, economical, and can be applied without the need for someone else.

Massage intensifies the blood flow in the area of application and reduces muscle tension. It also increases endorphin secretion and raises the pain threshold. Relaxation exercises, on the other hand, provide a decrease in sympathetic activity, an increase in parasympathetic activity and consequently a widening of the peripheral vessels, an increase in blood flow in the blood vessels, and a decrease in muscle tension and pain perception. Moreover, it has been reported that pain, anxiety, and depression symptoms decrease as a result of the decrease in the activation of the sympathetic nervous system, thanks to the deep breathing exercises performed during PRE. Therefore, it is predicted that massage combined with PRE will be beneficial in PD management. In this sense, this study was conducted to examine the effect of massage and PRE together on pain severity and other menstrual symptoms in PD treatment.

The literature includes no studies on the use of massage and PRE together in PD management. Therefore, the aim of the current study was to examine the effect of massage and PRE together on pain intensity and other menstrual symptoms in the management of PD.

Enrollment

97 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Being older than 18 years,
  • Having a dysmenorrhea pain intensity score ≥4 according to Visual Analog Scale (VAS),
  • Having no previous pregnancy experience,
  • Having no disease that leads to dysmenorrhea,
  • Using no hormonal contraception or intrauterine device,
  • Having a menstruation period of 3-8 days and a menstrual cycle of 21-35 days,
  • Having no systemic-chronic disease or physical/mental health problems that prevent/restrict massage or exercise,
  • Volunteering to participate in the study.

Exclusion criteria

  • Being younger than 18 years
  • Having a dysmenorrhea pain intensity score ≤ 4 according to Visual Analog Scale (VAS),
  • Having previous pregnancy experience,
  • Having disease that leads to dysmenorrhoea (endometriosis, ovarian cysts/tumors, pelvic infection disease, myoma/uterus tumor, uterus polyp, asherman syndrome, infection),
  • Using hormonal contraception and intrauterine devices,
  • Not to present a menstruation period that lasts 3-8 days and menstrual cycle of 21-35 days,
  • Having a systemic and chronic disease (diabetes, heart diseases, vein diseases, circulatory disorders, varicosis, blood diseases, etc.),
  • Having any physical/mental health problems that prevent/restrict massaging and exercising,
  • Not to be voluntary to join the study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

97 participants in 2 patient groups

experimental group
Experimental group
Description:
Students in the experimental group were taught about massage and progressive relaxation exercises (PRE). The phases of the massage and PRE trainings were first explained by being demonstrated by the author on herself. In the meantime, the trainings were video-taped and uploaded to the mobile phones of the students. After the author, each student was made to perform massage and PRE. Both the exercises and massage techniques were daily performed 3 times a day after pain had started and relaxation exercises lasted 30 minutes whereas massage was performed for 15 minutes consecutively
Treatment:
Other: progressive relaxation exercises and massage
control group
No Intervention group
Description:
The students in the control group continued their routines during the study.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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