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The Effect of Craniosacral Therapy on Blood Levels of Stress Hormones in Male Firefighter Cadets: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Małgorzata Wójcik, Bruno Bordoni, Idzi Siatkowski, Ewa Zekanowska
Key takeaways
  1. 01Five weeks of craniosacral therapy was associated with reduced cortisol and CRH levels
  2. 02The study focused on young men in a high-stress professional training environment
  3. 03Treatment involved specific techniques for the cranium, pelvis, and diaphragm over 20 minutes
  4. 04Findings suggest the therapy may influence endocrine system regulation of the stress response

Five weekly sessions of craniosacral therapy may help reduce physiological stress hormone levels in individuals facing high occupational stress.

Abstract

(1) Background: Fire department cadets preparing to become firefighters and paramedics experience high levels of stress when participating in incidents like traffic accidents and fires. Stress adversely affects health, and coping with it proves difficult. Unfortunately, there is no single method that reduces stress completely in humans. One non-invasive method for lowering stress hormone levels is craniosacral therapy. (2) Methods: Fifty-seven firefighting cadets aged 18–24 years (21.63 ± 1.41) participated in the study. They were randomly assigned to either a test group or a control group. Participants’ blood levels of cortisol and CRH (corticotropin-releasing hormone) were assessed before and after the study. The study group underwent 5-week craniosacral therapy (1× per week). (3) Results: The Kruskal–Wallis test showed that the therapy group’s results were statistically significant for CRH values (p-value = 0.00067) and for cortisol values (p-value ≤ 0.0001). Wilxocon and Dunn tests showed statistical significance for cortisol after CS therapy between the control and study groups (p = 0.0377), and for CRH between the control and study groups before (p = 0.00634) and after the study (p = 0.000887), and in the study group before and after the study (p = 0.0101). (4) Conclusions: The application of craniosacral therapy reduced stress hormone levels in male firefighter cadets. The results indicate that craniosacral therapy (five sessions, one per week) has an effect on the reduction of stress hormones.

Cite this study
APA
Małgorzata Wójcik, Bruno Bordoni, Idzi Siatkowski, & Ewa Zekanowska (2023). The Effect of Craniosacral Therapy on Blood Levels of Stress Hormones in Male Firefighter Cadets: A Randomized Clinical Trial. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/the-effect-of-craniosacral-therapy-on-blood-levels-of-stress-hormones-in-male-firefighter-cadets-a-randomized-clinical-trial/
MLA
Małgorzata Wójcik, et al. "The Effect of Craniosacral Therapy on Blood Levels of Stress Hormones in Male Firefighter Cadets: A Randomized Clinical Trial." 2023, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/the-effect-of-craniosacral-therapy-on-blood-levels-of-stress-hormones-in-male-firefighter-cadets-a-randomized-clinical-trial/.
Chicago
Małgorzata Wójcik et al. 2023. "The Effect of Craniosacral Therapy on Blood Levels of Stress Hormones in Male Firefighter Cadets: A Randomized Clinical Trial.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/the-effect-of-craniosacral-therapy-on-blood-levels-of-stress-hormones-in-male-firefighter-cadets-a-randomized-clinical-trial/