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Massage Therapy Attenuates Inflammatory Signaling After Exercise-Induced Muscle Damage

Justin D Crane, Daniel I Ogborn, Colleen Cupido, Simon Melov, Alan Hubbard, Jacqueline M Bourgeois, Mark A Tarnopolsky
Key takeaways
  1. 01Massage may reduce exercise-induced inflammation at the cellular level
  2. 02It appears to stimulate mitochondrial biogenesis (cell energy factories)
  3. 03It did not change muscle metabolites like glycogen or lactate
  4. 04These effects were seen after just 10 minutes of massage

Massage after intense exercise may reduce inflammation and promote cellular repair in muscles, according to biopsy evidence.

Abstract

Massage therapy is commonly used during physical rehabilitation of skeletal muscle to ameliorate pain and promote recovery from injury. Although there is evidence that massage may relieve pain in injured muscle, how massage affects cellular function remains unknown. To assess the effects of massage, we administered either massage therapy or no treatment to separate quadriceps of 11 young male participants after exercise-induced muscle damage. Muscle biopsies were acquired from the quadriceps (vastus lateralis) at baseline, immediately after 10 min of massage treatment, and after a 2.5-hour period of recovery. We found that massage activated the mechanotransduction signaling pathways focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2), potentiated mitochondrial biogenesis signaling [nuclear peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator 1α (PGC-1α)], and mitigated the rise in nuclear factor κB (NFκB) (p65) nuclear accumulation caused by exercise-induced muscle trauma. Moreover, despite having no effect on muscle metabolites (glycogen, lactate), massage attenuated the production of the inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) and reduced heat shock protein 27 (HSP27) phosphorylation, thereby mitigating cellular stress resulting from myofiber injury. In summary, when administered to skeletal muscle that has been acutely damaged through exercise, massage therapy appears to be clinically beneficial by reducing inflammation and promoting mitochondrial biogenesis.

Cite this study
APA
Justin D Crane, Daniel I Ogborn, Colleen Cupido, Simon Melov, Alan Hubbard, Jacqueline M Bourgeois, & Mark A Tarnopolsky (2012). Massage Therapy Attenuates Inflammatory Signaling After Exercise-Induced Muscle Damage. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/massage-therapy-attenuates-inflammatory-signaling-after-exercise-induced-muscle-damage/
MLA
Justin D Crane, et al. "Massage Therapy Attenuates Inflammatory Signaling After Exercise-Induced Muscle Damage." 2012, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/massage-therapy-attenuates-inflammatory-signaling-after-exercise-induced-muscle-damage/.
Chicago
Justin D Crane et al. 2012. "Massage Therapy Attenuates Inflammatory Signaling After Exercise-Induced Muscle Damage.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/massage-therapy-attenuates-inflammatory-signaling-after-exercise-induced-muscle-damage/