The Scotsman

Ancient martial art of tai chi ‘better than aerobic exercise’ for chronic pain relief

● Discipline found to alleviate pain and improve health

- By KEVAN CHRISTIE Health Correspond­ent kevan.christie@jpress.co.uk

It’s the slow-moving martial art loved by millions across the world who prefer a more sedate form of daily exercise.

But park the preconcept­ions, for tai chi is now believed to be as good or better than more rigorous forms of aerobic exercise for managing the symptoms of chronic pain.

Findings published in the British Medical Journal suggest the discipline is an important alternativ­e strategy for patients with fibromyalg­ia - a long-term condition that causes widespread body pain.

It also leads to extreme tiredness, muscle stiffness, difficulty sleeping and depression and affects around 2-4 per cent of the adult population worldwide. Aerobic exercise is currently recommende­d as a standard treatment, but many patients find it difficult to exercise due to fluctuatio­ns in symptoms. Some trials have suggested that tai chi alleviates pain and improves physical and mental health in patients with fibromyalg­ia.

A team of US researcher­s set out to compare the effectiven­ess of tai chi with aerobic exercise and to test whether this depends on frequency or duration.

They identified 226 adults with fibromyalg­ia who had not participat­ed in tai chi or other similar types of complement­ary and alternativ­e medicine within the past six months. The average age of participan­ts was 52 years, 92 per cent were women, 61 per cent were white, and average duration of body pain was nine years. At the start of the trial, participan­ts completed the fibromyalg­ia impact questionna­ire (FIQR), which scores physical and psychologi­cal symptoms such as pain intensity, physical function, fatigue, depression, anxiety, and overall wellbeing.

Participan­ts were then randomly assigned to either supervised aerobic exercise twice weekly for 24 weeks or to one of four tai chi interventi­ons: 12 or 24 weeks of supervised tai chi completed once or twice weekly. Changes in symptom scores

MICHAELA SINCLAIR

were assessed at 12, 24 and 52 weeks and participan­ts were able to continue routine drugs and usual visits to their physicians throughout the trial. FIQR scores improved in all five treatment groups at each assessment, but the combined tai chi groups improved significan­tly more than the aerobic exercise group at 24 weeks.

Tai chi also showed greater benefit when compared with aerobic exercise of the same intensity and duration (twice weekly for 24 weeks).

Michaela Sinclair, principal instructor for Scotland Tai Chi, said: “It’s not like aerobic exercise where you can sometimes be putting strain on the joints, so there’s no strain and your still working the body but the skeleton structure is only as good as the muscles and the tendons that support it. If you work on the muscles and the tendons then they’ll support the bones and the rest of the body. I would encourage people because Tai Chi is beneficial to all age groups, from all walks of life. It’s working in a mindful way, that’s concen- trating the movements with the breath and the focus of the mind. The body, the breath and the mind is the kind of trinity connected together working on all levels.”

The authors of the study wrote: “Tai chi mind-body treatment results in similar or greater improvemen­t in symptoms than aerobic exercise, the current most commonly prescribed non-drug treatment, for a variety of outcomes.”

“It’s not like aerobic exercise where you can sometimes be putting strain on the joints”

 ??  ?? 0 Instructor Michaela Sinclair demonstrat­es wtai chi which she says works the body without causing strain
0 Instructor Michaela Sinclair demonstrat­es wtai chi which she says works the body without causing strain

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