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Yoga
May Help Those With Chronic Pain
NEW
YORK (Reuters Health) - A small study of patients suffering from
chronic pain found that just 4 weeks of yoga improved symptoms.
``Yoga may
be another way for people to help themselves through life when
they live with chronic pain,'' lead investigator Dr. Sonia D.
Gaur of Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles, California,
told Reuters Health in an interview.
However, she
added, ``more studies need to be done.''
Gaur presented
her preliminary findings at the American Psychiatric Association's
annual meeting in May.
In the study,
18 men and women who had been experiencing persistent pain for
more than 3 months attended 90-minute yoga sessions three times
a week for 1 month. The study did not include a ``control'' group
for comparison.
The type of
yoga that was practiced by the volunteers, called Iyenger yoga,
combines meditative breathing exercises with different yoga poses,
Gaur explained.
The volunteers
were asked to complete questionnaires each week, which Gaur and
colleagues used to evaluate mood states, pain severity, and the
amount of pain medication taken at the start of the study and
throughout the 4-week period.
``All 18 of
the patients either experienced some kind of improvement or stayed
the same,'' Guar said. ``Nobody suffered any deterioration.''
All of the
patients ``showed a decrease of significant proportion in pain
medication use,'' had improved mood and decreased levels of anxiety,
and they were more likely to be able to participate in home and
family activities, such as household chores or recreational activities,
Guar noted.
``Yoga may
be able to help some people who suffer from chronic pain when
all other avenues are exhausted,'' she said.
Reference
Source 89
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