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Case report/case study

Are you mandated? (#23/31)

I always looked forward to my trip over the bridge to see my client, Mrs. Ford, in her skilled nursing facility in West Seattle.

Mrs. Ford had a long history of smoking before the stroke that took away most of her ability to speak and to move, so she was quite frail and had difficulty breathing. Despite the fact that she couldn't talk to me, and that she was mostly paralyzed, she was a sweet, cheerful lady, who managed to communicate a lot of meaning without being able to speak.

We worked out a system, much like "20 Questions", where I'd ask a yes-or-no question, and--based on the answer to that question--I'd choose the next question to ask. Depending on the quality of her sigh in response, I knew the answer was "yes" or "no", and then we'd proceed to the next question, until I was sure she was comfortable, securely positioned, and ready for her massage.

It was a laborious method, but it met her communication needs in the absence of her being able to speak.

Since I was so used to communicating with her in this way, I was totally blown away one day when, lying supine on the table, she grabbed my wrist in a death grip, and pulled me close to her face.

In a breathy whisper, she slowly forced her lips to form the words "Shheee's.......hurrttingg......mmmeeeee."

One of the nursing assistants had been abusing her, knowing that she was unable to defend herself.

 

 


Do you know what the laws are in the state regarding your status as a mandated reporter--one who is required to report cases of suspected abuse or neglect of a member of a vulnerable population?

Are you considered a mandated reporter?

If so, what populations are you responsible for making reports about, if you suspect that someone is being abused or neglected?

What counts as abuse? Physical? Sexual? Emotional? Financial? Neglect?

RAINN (The Rape, Abuse, and Incest National Network) provides information pages about the laws in different states.

They also provide this information:

  • Who Must Report?
  • Standard of Knowledge
  • Definition of Applicable Victim
  • Reports Made To
  • Contents of Report
  • Timing/Other Procedures
  • Other
  • Source/Applicable Statute(s)

 

They seem pretty good, but it would also not hurt to check them against other information sources, such as the local chapter of your professional organization, for example.

The reason I'm not sure it's right is that, for my state (Washington), it lists MTs as mandated reporters for elder abuse, but not for children.

It's not impossible that that's the way the law really reads, but I want to double-check that before assuming.

In a way, it doesn't matter, because I am not about to sit on my hands and say, oh, well, a child's being abused, but I'm not required to report it, la la la. So it won't change what I would ever do if I did learn that a child was being abused.

But on the other hand, it does seem odd that elder abuse reporting is mandated, but child abuse is not.

So for the moment, at least, I'd treat this source much as I treat Wikipedia--a good portal or jumping-off place, but not the be-all and end-all of necessary information that I depend on to get exactly right.

 

 


What happened with Mrs. Ford was this: I asked her daughter what she might be talking about, because I did not fully understand. Her daughter suspected she knew who her mother was talking about, and confirmed it with her mother.

We then went to the director of the skilled nursing facility to report it.

It turned out that this nursing assistant had a checkered track record, and was on probation. Abusing Mrs. Ford was the last straw, and the nursing assistant was let go after an investigation of the accusation.

I continued to work with Mrs. Ford for a couple of years after that, and when I returned to school, she was the only client that I kept on working with while trying to adjust to the grad school environment and the course load.

I stayed her MT until she passed away.

But except for that one time, she never tried to speak verbally to me again.

 

Source: National Committee for the Prevention of Elder Abuse, "Preventing Abuse to Elders" http://www.preventelderabuse.org/images/img03.jpg accessed 22 August 2012

Lu 2009: Integrative Tumor Board: a case report and discussion from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (#22/31)

Lu W, Ott MJ, Kennedy S, Mathay MB, Doherty-Gilman AM, Dean-Clower E, Hayes CM, Rosenthal DS. Integrative Tumor Board: a case report and discussion from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Integr Cancer Ther. 2009 Sep;8(3):235-41. PMID: 19815593 PMCID: PMC2831080 Free PMC Article

A 34-year-old woman carrying a BRCA1 gene and a significant family history was diagnosed with T1c, N1 breast cancer. The tumor was estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and HER-2/Neu negative. The patient received dose-dense chemotherapy with Adriamycin and Cytoxan followed by Taxol, and left breast irradiation. Later, a bilateral S-GAP flap reconstruction with right prophylactic mastectomy and left mastectomy were performed. During her treatment, the patient had an integrative medicine consultation and was seen by a team of health care providers specializing in integrative therapies, including integrative nutrition, therapeutic massage, acupuncture, and yoga. Each modality contributed unique benefit in her care that led to a satisfactory outcome for the patient. A detailed discussion regarding her care from each modality is presented. The case elucidates the need for integrative approaches for cancer patients in a conventional medical setting.

 

 

 

 


Case Scenario

DK a 34-year-old female physical therapist first presented to her obstetrician/gynecologist in November 2004 for evaluation of her increased risk of breast and ovarian cancer. Her risk was deemed high based on her mother’s diagnosis at age 54 with fairly rapidly progressive and drug resistant ovarian cancer, which led then to her subsequent death.

 

This part of the patient's history is pretty straightforward.

 

In addition, DK carried the BRCA1 gene and had an aunt and 2 of her 3 sisters who also were carriers. The aunt was diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 50 and is alive with the disease. It is unclear whether a maternal great aunt had either ovarian or uterine cancer.

 

Here, we get into shorthand that can be confusing for non-specialists who don't have the same implicit knowledge.

Everyone carries the BRCA1 gene. What the author means to say here is that DK and her aunt and sisters carried a particular mutation of the BRCA1 gene, and that particular mutation is linked to high rates of cancer (including breast cancer and ovarian cancer)--so much so that people sometimes get preventive mastectomies or hysterectomies to avoid getting the cancers associated with that mutation of the gene.

 

Review of DK’s history is fairly unremarkable. Her periods began at age 13 and had been regular from 24 to 34 while she was on oral contraceptive therapy (OCT). She discontinued OCT in April of 2004 in anticipation of marriage in August 2005 and plans for early conception. At that time she began having irregular periods with mild to moderate cramps. Sexually active, she had normal pap smears since her initial one at age 18. She carried out breast self-examinations regularly. Her review of systems had been generally negative with a stable weight of 115 lbs with good nutrition and regular exercise routines. Her only notable past medical history was surgery on her jaw in 1993.

 

This is all pretty straightforward.

 

Her initial examination in November 2004 was normal and at that time she was found to carry the BRCA1 gene.

 

They shorthanded it again, but after our previous discussion, you should understand what they mean to say she carries.

 

She had her first cancer screening including a pelvic ultrasound which was normal and a CA 125 in the normal range. It was recommended that she continue to have a pelvic ultrasound and CA 125 drawn every 6 months.

 

CA 125 is a protein in the blood that is used as a blood marker in testing for ovarian cancer. It is useful for that purpose, because it often occurs at elevated levels in women with ovarian cancer, but since other conditions--some of them harmless--can cause the protein levels in the blood to be elevated, it is not a perfect test.

Although elevated CA 125 can point to ovarian cancer, you can also have elevated CA 125 levels without having ovarian cancer.

 

As a BRCA1 heterozygote, DK was followed in the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI ) high risk clinic.

 

We have two copies of each gene in most of the cells of our bodies, one each from our mother and our father.

If the two copies of the gene are the same, that's called being a homozygote--for example, if we get an X chromosome from our mother, and another X chromosome from our father, then we are homozygotes with XX chromosomes, and we're female.

If we get an X chromosome from our mother, and a Y chromosome from our father, then we are heterozygotes with XY chromosomes, and we're male.

BRCA1 heterozygote means that DK had two different kinds of the same BRCA gene from her mother and father, presumably one copy with the bad mutation, and one normal copy.

 

She had her first child, a son, in May 2006 and the birth was complicated by a C section infection. She intended to breast feed, but experienced breast pain. In October of 2006, 5 weeks after her son’s birth, she noted a mass in the upper outer aspect of the left breast which did not resolve with massage.

 

Not the kind of massage MTs perform, by the way--we never try to just massage a suspicious lump away.

 

An ultrasound of the breast showed a suspicious lesion in the lateral aspect and an ultra sound guided core biopsy showed a grade 3 invasive ductal carcinoma without lymphovascular invasion.

 

Carcinoma is a kind of cancer that originates in epithelial cells, such as the ones that line the milk ducts of the breast.

Source: http://besthealth.bmj.com/x/images/bh/en-gb/mastitis-image_default.jpg accessed 22 August 2012

 

Grade 3 means that the cells visible under the microscope are very distorted. Breast Cancer Canada explains in more detail:

Histologic Grade
  • Grade 1. Well Differentiated, or low grade

  • Grade 2. Moderately differentiated, or intermediate grade

  • Grade 3. Poorly differentiated, or high grade

Note that overall grades are also described as 'highly differentiated, moderately differentiated, and poorly differentiated. Sometimes these terms may be confusing. A cell that has enough functioning normal DNA to form a specific type of tissue, and behave like that tissue, is "differentiated". A cell that has so many mutations, that it forms hideously distorted tissues, is poorly-differentiated. A higher cancer grading corrsponds to more poorly-differentiated cells and cellular structures.--http://www.breast-cancer.ca/staging/infiltratingductalcarcinoma-grading.htm accessed 22 August 2012

 

Source: http://www.breast-cancer.ca/images/dcis-grade3.jpg accessed 22 August 2012

 

 

The fact that it has not yet invaded the lymph or vascular systems around it means that they caught it before it had a chance to spread significantly to the regions around the lump.

 

The tumor was estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and Her 2-Nu negative, often referred to as a triple negative breast cancer.

 

This refers to receptors in the cancer cells. If the cells have receptors for these hormones, then hormonal therapy can be used to treat the cancer, since the receptors are there for the hormonal therapy to bind to.

Triple-negative cancers don't have any of those receptors, so hormonal therapy won't work, and these cancers are especially aggressive.

One of the bits of implicit knowledge that cancer specialists reading this have, but that has not been said here, is that--although we cannot say anything for sure about DK's specific prognosis--the fact that she has a triple-negative breast cancer means that she is in a population that responds to chemotherapy more poorly than the population with other kinds of breast cancer does, and that the prognosis for DK's group's 5-year survival is worse than for populations with other types of breast cancer.

However, there is evidence that if they do make it through that difficult 5-year window, then survival rates long-term are similar to those of populations with other forms of breast cancer.

 

On lymph node biopsy, one of 4 nodes showed a 0.5 millimeter micrometastis.

 

Although not yet widespread, the metastasis of the tumor has begun.

 

A PET CT was performed which showed intense tracer uptake within the primary tumor in the left breast. There were other areas in the left breast adjacent to the primary tumor where there was a lower grade tracer uptake consistent with inflammatory changes.

 

Positron emission tomography (PET) is an imaging technique that shows metabolic activity in a living organism. Intense tracer uptake in the primary tumor means that that tumor is quite metabolically active, and other areas in the left breast where the metabolic activity indicates that inflammation is taking place.

Source: http://www.wmicmeeting.org/2011/2011abstracts/data/papers/images/T140_A.jpg accessed 22 August 2012

 

There was also minimal uptake seen in the left axillary nodes and no FDG evidence of distant disease. The resected breast specimen measured 5.4 by 4.3 by 1.7 centimeters.

 

Very little or no metabolic activity was observed by PET in the lymph nodes or spread to more distant sites.

5.4 by 4.3 by 1.7 centimeters is about 2 inches by 1-3/4 inches by 2/3 inches in size.

 

The final pathology report came back as triple negative invasive ductal carcinoma poorly differentiated (modified beam-richardson grade II/III) measuring at least 0.6 centimeters in size with no lymphovascular invasion. In addition, there was also ductal carcinoma in situ, solid type (high nuclear grade), without necrosis or calcifications.

 

Ductal carcinoma in situ means the cancer is in its original place--in the site where it began, the epithelial tissue of the milk ducts.

You can see necrosis (traumatic cell death) and calcifications (calcium deposits, which can indicate sites of trauma or inflammation) in the previous microphotograph of cancer cells.

 

Her course of treatment after the initial lumpectomy and sentinel node biopsy would include chemotherapy and then breast and nodal irradiation followed by bilateral mastectomy.

 

First, they would take out the lump, and some additional lymph nodes that serve as watchguards (sentinels) to indicate whether or not the cancer has spread to the lymphatic system yet.

Next, they would administer chemotherapy.

Third, they would administer radiation therapy.

Finally, they remove both her breasts.

This sounds drastic, and, compared with the treatment for most breast cancers, it is.

The reason they got so aggressive with DK's treatment is her BRCA1 mutation. Not everyone with that mutation gets breast cancer--but if they do, then the cancer is so dangerously aggressive that it can get ahead of more moderate treatments very fast.

BRCA1 mutation-associated cancers are so likely to happen, and are so dangerous, that many women choose to have preventive mastectomies, hysterectomies, and oopherectomies (removal of ovaries) before any signs of cancer ever show up.

Their risk-benefit analysis is that the cancer, if it ever should occur, will be so bad that it is worth running the risk of taking out perfectly healthy organs that may never get sick, in order to get the guarantee that they will not develop cancer.

DK's family history of her mother's early death from ovarian cancer, and her aunt living with breast cancer, reinforce her risk, and were factors in this treatment decision.

 

She was staged as a T1C, N1 breast cancer.

 

Grading, which we talked about previously, sounds similar to staging, so it's easy to confuse the two, but they're not the same thing. Grading talks about the form of the cancer itself (the size of the nuclei, or how well or poorly differentiated the cells are); staging refers to how far it's spread at a particular time.

The TNM system is one of the most widely used staging systems. This system has been accepted by the International Union Against Cancer (UICC) and the American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC). Most medical facilities use the TNM system as their main method for cancer reporting. PDQ®, NCI’s comprehensive cancer information database, also uses the TNM system.

The TNM system is based on the extent of the tumor (T), the extent of spread to the lymph nodes (N), and the presence of distant metastasis (M). A number is added to each letter to indicate the size or extent of the primary tumor and the extent of cancer spread.

Primary Tumor (T)
TX    Primary tumor cannot be evaluated
T0    No evidence of primary tumor
Tis    Carcinoma in situ (CIS; abnormal cells are present but have not spread to neighboring tissue; although not cancer, CIS may become cancer and is sometimes called preinvasive cancer)
T1, T2, T3, T4    Size and/or extent of the primary tumor

Regional Lymph Nodes (N)
NX    Regional lymph nodes cannot be evaluated
N0    No regional lymph node involvement
N1, N2, N3    Involvement of regional lymph nodes (number of lymph nodes and/or extent of spread)

Distant Metastasis (M)
MX    Distant metastasis cannot be evaluated
M0    No distant metastasis
M1    Distant metastasis is present

--National Cancer Institute, "Cancer staging", accessed 22 August 2012

 

So DK's T1C N1 was toward the lower end of the scale in spread, which is better than a more widespread tumor would be.

 

She did undergo dose-dense Adriamycin/Cytoxan followed by Taxol, then left breast irradiation, and in November 2007 underwent a bilateral S-GAP flap reconstruction with right prophylactic mastectomy and left mastectomy by a reconstructive surgeon. The pathology of the mastectomy specimens was normal. According to her medical providers at the time, she tolerated treatment well with the exception of some mucocitis during chemotherapy, She returned to work as a physical therapist.

 

Adriamycin, cytoxan, and taxol are all chemotherapy drugs.

The treatment plan followed the sequence previously outlined.

You might wonder why, if they're going to remove her breasts anyway, why put her through chemo and radiation first?

The reason is they're trying to fight a very aggressive cancer on all fronts, and to prevent spread by any means necessary. The fact that the pathology of the mastectomy specimens was normal indicates that they succeeded in that goal--because they took out a lot of healthy tissue that was not infiltrated by the cancer, that means they probably succeeded in getting all of the cancer that was surrounded by that tissue.

Mucocitis: they misspelled "mucositis", from mucosa (mucus membrane) + -itis (inflammation). Mucositis is a condition that is often a side effect of cancer treatment--the lining of the throat and esophagus become inflamed, and eating becomes painful and unappealing.

If you think back to the first day of the first anatomy class you took, what was the very first thing taught in it?

Probably the four tissue types:

  1. Epithelial,
  2. Connective,
  3. Muscle, and
  4. Nervous tissues.

 

As you learned, they're qualitatively very different from each other--they originate and grow in different ways, and they carry out very different jobs.

One of the characteristics of the epithelial tissue in the digestive tract is that it is fast-growing. Since radiation and chemotherapy have the most powerful effects on fast-growing cells, that means that the digestive tract mucosa is especially vulnerable to the side effects of those treatments (the same for hair, by the way, which is why many cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy or radiation lose their hair).

That's pretty much it for the highly technical part of the excerpt I'm presenting here; the rest of it should be fairly easy to read, so I'll see you again on the other side.

 

DK began to discuss with her physician the timing for her to get pregnant again; how long to wait after chemotherapy, when the risk of recurrence is maximal, whether pregnancy can affect the risk for recurrence, and other questions. It was suggested that she wait 2.5 years after the completion of active treatment. She continued to be followed by her primary oncologist and radiation therapist.

...

During the course of her therapy, she was seen in consultation by several members of the Leonard P. Zakim Center for Integrative Therapies at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute including a nutritionist, an integrative oncologist, a massage therapist, a Lebed Method instructor, and an acupuncturist. All sessions were held on-site in the cancer hospital and the medical clearance for each therapy was obtained from the primary oncologist. All clinical notes were documented in the patient’s electronic medical record and communication back to the primary oncologist happened as needed.

At the time she had the integrative medicine and nutrition consults, she was receiving her 3rd cycle of Taxol therapy just before her radiation therapy. She was interested in knowing more about nutrition and cancer, and specifically about management of her hot flashes and the use of dietary supplements. She expressed a great deal of anxiety in terms of ending chemotherapy treatment and was very interested in healthy behaviors for cancer survivorship. Her comment was “I want everything I put into my mouth to be the right thing.” Her diet consisted of 3 meals a day and sometimes snacks. Her symptomatology included frequent hot flashes and constipation alongside some bone and muscle pain and some muscle twitching. She continued to be physically active, but less so during the radiation and chemotherapy. She often tried to do some cardiac exercises and weight training but this was limited due to the fatigue she related to the chemotherapy and radiation therapy. She had many questions for both the nutritionist and the integrative oncologist about ginseng and sage supplements.

...

Her integrative medicine/oncology consult was held shortly thereafter which reinforced the nutritional advice, emphasized the use of the Vitamin D, fish oil and a phytonutrient rich diet. The importance of physical activity was also emphasized. It was revealed that DK had been a high caliber tennis player while at college.

One of the issues brought forth during this consultation was the anxiety of trying to care for her son during radiation therapy while continuing to care for herself. It became obvious during this interview that there was a great deal of anxiety and stress dealing with the breast cancer and raising a child. Various types of integrative therapies were discussed with DK. She expressed a significant interest in acupuncture and other mechanisms of reducing anxiety and stress. In addition, it was suggested that DK find some of her own time separate from demands of her work and her childcare could interfere with. A social worker became involved and facilitated some new arrangements for childcare. She was taught the relaxation response, encouraged to practice the breathing technique daily for 30 minutes. In addition, acupuncture was discussed and she was referred for an acupuncture consultation.

...

DK also elected to receive massage therapy to help with her left arm discomfort. Massage for her left arm discomfort had a noted marked improvement in her range of motion. She also had been having constant left shoulder discomfort which she wanted addressed as well. She received light to moderate pressure slow speeds general massage techniques She also received regulated neuromuscular techniques (NMT), myofascial release techniques (MFR), manual lymphatic drainage techniques (MLD) and basic acupressure techniques (BA) as called for during her sessions.

She felt that the massage made her feel good and it was suggested that she continue this integrative care treatment with massage, acupuncture, and yoga. She also exercised by participating in the Lebed Method movement classes held at DFCI for her upper extremity lymphedema prevention. With massage, she noted significant improvement after the session and continued to have therapeutic massage every two to three weeks. She increased her physical activity, including the new addition of yoga. Overall, the massage, yoga, Lebed classes, and her physical therapy helped with cording, muscle tension after surgery and radiation and with general relaxation.

Through all of the interventions, DK continued to rehabilitate and feel well. She increased her exercise and was better able to balance her work life and her family life, taking good care of her son.

She started acupuncture during her radiation therapy and continued this for several months afterwards. She received a total of 12 acupuncture treatments and the results were a decreasing back pain and a decreasing in the intensity of the hot flashes. She started her massage therapy at the end of her radiation therapy and continued for 14 massage visits which resulted in improvements in her muscle aches, pains and anxiety. Presently, she continues to feel well with diminishing hot flashes, increasing energy, a balanced diet, and regular, daily exercise.

...

Massage

All massage sessions and techniques at the Zakim Center are modified for the oncology population to ensure a safe and effective treatment for our patients, at different stages of their diagnosis, illness and recovery. DK had very specific reasons for using massage therapy as an integrative modality. One was the physical issue of tension and discomfort manifesting as a deep pain in her left shoulder blade area, rated 3 out of 10. Second was the emotional issue, manifesting as anxiety.

In designing the treatment plan to address these issues, DK and the massage therapist discussed the following:

  • The possible multi-factorial issues surrounding her discomfort (postural changes, surgery, radiation, overuse and possibly emotional factors).
  • Laboratory results-scans to rule out structural issues or bone involvement.
  • The need for integrative care and inclusion of self care for more long term results.
  • Understanding that the resolution (temporary vs. permanent) of the anxiety symptom may depend on what is going on with her diagnosis and coping after treatment as well as other factors.
  • Combination of techniques to address the symptoms and modifications that may be needed.

 

In DKs situation the following techniques were used:

  • General massage techniques (MT); effleurage and petrissage to the full body were administered for warm up and integration. Addressing the entire body surface area with light to moderate pressure and slow, rhythmic techniques was a good way to elicit the relaxation response and calm the body back down after doing the focus sessions.
  • Regulated neuromuscular techniques (NMT) were chosen to address the increased muscle tension on the shoulders and upper back erectors for more focused work and trigger point release.
  • Manual lymphatic drainage (MLD) techniques were incorporated into the session. Although DK was not at a high risk for lymphedema, the decision to incorporate MLD was more for preventive and proactive purposes after focus work in consideration of the load on the tissues brought about by recent radiation therapy. MLD was also useful in addressing the “cording”, and the techniques in themselves provide a relaxing rhythm.
  • Myofascial techniques (MFR) were later used for help with tightness after radiation therapy. These also included some light pin and stretch work and muscle energy techniques.
  • Good intention holds and/or basic acupressure points (BA) were used as transition or termination techniques as a slow way to ease the body back from the massage session.

 

The combination of these techniques seemed to work very well for DK, with immediate response in addressing both the anxiety and shoulder discomfort. DK always reported feeling very relaxed after her sessions. Complete resolution of the deep left shoulder blade discomfort was achieved after the 3rd visit.

During the subsequent sessions, we had to address any recurring or additional discomfort or sequelae that came up. This included tightness at the area of radiation, pectoral tightness, decrease range of motion of the left shoulder and “cording”. Techniques were added or the combination of the above mentioned techniques modified to address this. General MT was always used to continue to address her need for relaxation.

DK continued to use massage as part of her integrative care with PT, OT, and swimming and yoga for self care throughout recovery and healing.

The last time DK was seen at the Zakim Center, she scheduled a massage to coincide with her oncology check up. A year and 4 months after she first engaged in integrative therapies, she reported feeling well and is now balancing and enjoying her work and family life.

...

Summary

Cancer patients often request support from integrative therapies in addition to their conventional cancer therapy. The evidence-based integrative therapies presented here demonstrated many advantages in being offered through a team approach at this comprehensive cancer center. It is important for cancer patients to be able to speak with and receive guidance from their medical team about integrative therapies so that the best of all available therapies can be safely and effectively offered as part of the patient’s care plan. Future work in integrative oncology should focus on improving clinical effectiveness, enhancing financial sustainability, maintaining high safety standards, and improving communication so that all patients and clinicians are aware of the benefits that integrative therapies can provide during the cancer journey.

 

Although case reports can't tell anything about cause and effect, there is a lot here about DK's experience that deserves further investigation.

Massage has good evidence supporting its use for treating pain and anxiety, both of which she experienced as she learned she had aggressive breast cancer, that she had a mutation that gave her an excellent chance of having the cancer recur in future, and that going through and adapting to a very disfiguring treatment actually made sense in light of her BRCA1 status.

The Summary identifies areas where further investigation and increased clarity around the use of massage in cancer treatment would be very valuable:

  1. clinical effectiveness: does massage for cancer care do what people claim it does? How does it do so? What are the best matches between client needs and availability/access to massage?
  2. enhancing financial sustainability: can massage demonstrate outcomes that justify its reimbursement as part of healthcare plans? What would it take to do so?
  3. maintaining high safety standards: we're past the day (I hope!) where, out of fear, we totally contraindicated massage for people living with cancer--but what real, validated, client-centered knowledge about safety is needed to fill that vacuum? and
  4. improving communication: what can we teach our clients to expect? What do our clients need for us to hear from them? How does all this fit into the larger picture?

 

 

 

Another MT saves a client's life: Davies 2003-- Syphilis referred from complementary medicine therapy (#20/31)

We're all clear (I hope) on the principle that MTs--at least in the US--do not diagnose or prescribe. It would be a massive overreach to do so, and we'd deserve the smackdown that would result if we got caught doing it.

It would never be right for us to inform someone that they have a particular disease, nor to prescribe to them what they should do about any condition they have.

But we do observe during a session, and as a result, we sometimes see things that need to have prompt action taken, in order to protect the client from harm.

So we need to be skillful about reporting what we observe to the client--we may need to balance the urgency of making it clear to the client how serious it is to follow up, versus not diagnosis, prescribing, or unnecessarily frightening them.

There are many anecdotal cases of MTs telling clients that they should get a suspicious skin lesion checked out. When the diagnosis turns out to be melanoma, which--if it remained undetected--would very likely disfigure and then kill them, then the MT rightly gets the credit for saving the client's life.


Source: http://img.medscape.com/pi/emed/ckb/dermatology/1048885-1100753-2560.jpg accessed 20 August 2012

Melanoma accounts for only 4% of all skin cancers; however, it causes the greatest number of skin cancer–related deaths worldwide. Early detection of thin cutaneous melanoma is the best means of reducing mortality.--Medscape, "Cutaneous Melanoma" accessed 20 August 2012

 

Sometimes, that early detection that is the best means of reducing mortality (the death rate) comes from an MT who observes something, and tells the client "I think you ought to get that checked out with your primary healthcare provider.".

This case report is similar, yet the lesion the MT observed and recommended follow-up for to the client came from a very different condition.

 

 

 

 


Syphilis is a horrible way to die.

Source: "Portrait of Gerard de Lairesse by Rembrandt van Rijn, circa 1665–67, oil on canvas - De Lairesse, himself a painter and art theorist, suffered from congenital syphilis that severely deformed his face and eventually blinded him." http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/42/Rembrandt_Harmensz._van_Rijn_095.jpg accessed 20 August 2012

 

The man in this picture was born with ("congenital") syphilis, and you can see, even in a painting, how disfigured his face is from the disease.

The bacteria that cause syphilis, Trepomena pallidum, are spirochetes--spiral-shaped--as you can see in this electron micrograph from Wikipedia, and are spread mainly by direct sexual contact, and also from mother to child at birth:

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/29/Treponema_pallidum.jpg accessed 20 August 2012

 

Although syphilis is referred to as "protean" (versatile, flexible, changeable) in the article we're about to review, because it can take so many forms, there is a typical presentation that's considered classic of the disease:

  • Stage I--Primary syphilis: A chancre (painless sore). Usually occurs about 3 weeks after initial exposure to infection.
  • Stage II--Secondary syphilis: Widespread rash, often involving hands and feet, possibly including other symptoms of infection such as fever, headache, weight loss. Usually occurs about 4-10 weeks after Stage I.
  • Stage III--Latent syphilis: Asymptomatic. Usually occurs around a year after initial infection.
  • Stage IV--Tertiary syphilis: Ulcerated lesions, neurological symptoms (loss of balance, apathy, seizures, dementia), cardiac symptoms (inflammation of aorta, aneurysms). Usually occurs anywhere from 3 to 45 years after initial infection.

 

The disease has been recorded in art and literature in Europe since about the 1500s. That fact, and the discovery of thousand-year-old tombs in Peru, where mummies and bones showed signs of the disease, reinforce the hypothesis that the disease originated in the New World, and was brought back to Europe by the crews of explorers and conquerors.

Source: http://images.nationalgeographic.com/wpf/media-live/photos/000/542/cache/peru-tomb-80-individuals-found-skeleton_54286_600x450.jpg accessed 21 August 2012

 

Syphilis goes back in recorded history for centuries--most of that time without effective treatment--and devastated people of all classes and walks of life. Those facts, along with the intimate linkage of the disease with love and sex, means that it figures largely in literature and art of the 18th and 19th centuries.

Keats' poem, "La Belle Dame Sans Merci (The Beautiful Lady Without Pity)" is often interpreted to represent the disease as a beautiful lover, who coldly strikes down kings, princes, and knights with no regard for their suffering:

I met a lady in the meads,
  Full beautiful—a faery’s child,
Her hair was long, her foot was light,
  And her eyes were wild.

...

I made a garland for her head,
  And bracelets too, and fragrant zone;
She look’d at me as she did love,
  And made sweet moan.

...

She found me roots of relish sweet,
  And honey wild, and manna dew,
And sure in language strange she said—
  “I love thee true.”

She took me to her elfin grot,
  And there she wept, and sigh’d fill sore,
And there I shut her wild wild eyes
  With kisses four.

...

I saw pale kings and princes too,
  Pale warriors, death-pale were they all;
They cried—“La Belle Dame sans Merci
  Hath thee in thrall!”

--John Keats, "La Belle Dame Sans Merci (The Beautiful Lady Without Pity)", 1884 accessed 21 August 2012


 

Twentieth-century medicine--specifically, the discovery of the antibiotic penicillin--made enormous inroads into the suffering caused by syphilis, and in the developed world, the disease is much more under control than it used to be. (It's a different story in the developing world, and that's a big enough topic to deserve its own post later on.)

But cases still occur, and although it's unlikely that you'll ever have a client suffering from untreated syphilis, it's not totally impossible, either.

Here's a case report of an MT who observed something suspicious, acted upon that suspicion, and probably saved the client's life, sparing him a great deal of suffering from the later stages of the disease, as well.

 

 


Case report:

Davies S, O'Farrell N. Syphilis referred from complementary medicine therapy. Int J STD AIDS. 2003 Sep;14(9):640-1. PMID: 14511505

 

 

Introduction

Syphilis is a disease with protean manifestations that often goes undetected in its early stages. Recently an upsurge in syphilis has been reported amongst gay men in various parts of the UK despite changes in sexual behaviour towards safer sex as a consequence of the HIV epidemic. We report a case of syphilis in which transmission occurred despite safer sex in which the diagnosis was flagged up by the observations of a complementary therapist.

 

Important take-home points:

  • Syphilis is "protean"--changeable, variable, flexible. It can take many forms.
  • Because it can be so changeable, its early stages--where it's most treatable--can go undetected. If the disease is missed in the early stages, that lays the groundwork for the devastating later stages that can include neurosyphilis and cardiac involvement.
  • The HIV epidemic has led to safer sex practices, which is turn had led to a decrease in syphilis rates, BUT recently (2003, as of this article) syphilis rates have surged higher--why this is the case, they do not say.
  • The MT was the one who observed the symptoms of syphilis in this client and referred him for diagnosis and treatment of what turned out to be a very serious disease.

 

Case report

A 50-year-old HIV-positive gay man attended a complementary therapist on the infectious diseases ward for a massage in July 2001.

 

Here's an example of where massage is incorporated into a hospital ward in a National Health Service (NHS) hospital in England.

We know the client is HIV-positive, so opportunistic infections--ones that take the opportunity of establishing themselves, with the immune system weakened by HIV--are always something to keep in mind as a risk for this client.

 

The masseuse noticed a rash on the patient’s feet that was not present on previous visits and referred him directly to the HIV clinic the same day.

 

Important take-home points:

  • Although the rash on the feet is part of the classic symptomatic presentation in Stage II syphilis, there are many other things it could be as well, and we never diagnose.
  • The MT referred the client directly to the HIV clinic (where there are primary healthcare providers to diagnose and treat), where he was seen the same day.

 

Without diagnosing, and without panicking the client, what might you say to get the client to follow up with their primary healthcare provider in a case like this?

If you think about what you might say, and rehearse it, then--if you ever need it--you won't be struggling to come up with words on the spot.

 

Six weeks previously he had noticed an infection around the nail on his left middle finger which had responded only partially to antibiotics from his general practitioner. He was otherwise well with an undetectable viral load, CD4 count of 640 cells/mL and was taking trizivir and efavirenz as antiretroviral therapy.

 

Again, we don't diagnose, and would never say so to the client--but it's pretty clear that that was the classic Stage I chancre (painless sore) presentation of syphilis.

It is interesting that it responded only partially to antibiotics from the GP. Did the GP miss anything? Would we comment on that to the client?

 

Figure 1. "Paronychia of middle finger—site of primary chancre" accessed 20 August 2012

 

He had a long-term male partner with whom he practised oral sex only. Six weeks previously he had contact with a casual male partner in a sauna in London where he had practised active digital rectal penetration but did not have penile penetrative anal sex.

 

Would we ever ask for this information in an intake or history?

Might this information ever come to us in a different way? If so, in what ways?

What would we do with this information?

If we have a problem with this behavior, would we tell the client?

What is the ethical way for a healthcare provider to deal with aspects of a client's sexual history that might make us uncomfortable?

 

On examination, he had a maculopapular rash over his trunk and the soles of his feet. A soft tissue swelling was apparent around the nail of his left middle finger, which was not ulcerated and resembled a paronychia (Figure 1). General examination was otherwise unremarkable.

 

Although the article did not include a picture of the client's rash, this is an example from Wikipedia of what a secondary syphilitic rash can look like:

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/eb/2ndsyphil2.jpg accessed 21 August 2012

 

 

He underwent a sexual health screen, including urethral, pharyngeal and rectal swabs and syphilis serology. All results were negative except syphilis serology which showed: rapid plasma reagin test: positive 1:64, Treponema pallidum particle agglutination assay: positive, > 1280, syphilis IgM enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) positive, Syphilis IgG ELISA Positive.

 

Important take-home points:

  • His bloodwork tested negative for everything else, and positive for syphilis.

 

He was reviewed five days later with the results of these tests. The rash over his trunk had increased and he had developed painful papules over the palms of his hands. The apparent paronychia on his left middle finger remained. A diagnosis of secondary syphilis was made and he received an uneventful 14-day course of procaine penicillin 600,000 U by intramuscular injection. His regular partner received a full sexual health screen that was negative. The casual sexual contact was untraceable.

Discussion

The case is of interest for a number of aspects. It is probable that this patient’s primary chancre was the lesion noted on his left middle finger. Syphilitic chancres involving the hand with a paronychia have been reported but are uncommon[1,2]. Since the decline of syphilis in the 1980s there are no reports of syphilitic paronychias. This man developed syphilis despite practising 'safer sex'. Recently there has been an increase in syphilis in gay men in the UK. Most cases appear to be acquired from casual sexual contacts in meeting places where anonymity is a feature.

 

This is the sentence that stands out the most for me in this article, as it shows what real and important value our observations can provide to the client:

The abnormal rash was identified initially by a complementary practitioner who advised that a medical opinion be sought without delay.

 

The rest of the article is a summation of the situation at the time the article was written:

The Public Health Laboratory Service reports that the number of cases of syphilis in the UK has increased over the last 2 years[3]. In 2000 there were 321 cases of syphilis in England and Wales, and between 1998-2000 an increase of 191% was observed in males. A greater proportion of syphilis infections are transmitted amongst men who have sex with men than any other sexually transmitted infection. The risk of HIV transmission in gay men is also increased when a syphilis infection is present. Since 1997, there have been a number of outbreaks of syphilis in major cities, including Manchester and Brighton. In Manchester nearly half the cases diagnosed were in HIV-positive gay men[4].

Oral sex is quoted as an important factor in the transmission of syphilis in these outbreaks, although our case report highlights another potentially high-risk sexual practice. Whilst the risk of transmission of syphilis can be minimized by using a condom for oral and anal sex, other sexual practices perceived as low risk may still carry a risk of infection.

 

And, once again, the MT's role in observing something unusual and referring the client to a primary healthcare provider is re-emphasized:

The case also reinforces the need for all staff working within the field of HIV/genitourinary medicine and indeed, other health care professionals, to be vigilant for clinical signs in patients who otherwise appear asymptomatic. In this case it was the masseuse not the clinicians who identified the abnormal rash of secondary syphilis.

 

The importance of the MT's action should not be underestimated. We've seen what effects undetected and untreated syphilis can have over the course of decades.

By getting the client diagnosed and treated, the MT took action that probably saved the client years of suffering, followed by a dismal death.

 

References

  1. Kingsbury DH, Chester EC, Jansen GT. Syphilitic paronychia: an unusual complaint. Arch Dermatol 1972;105:458.
  2. Starzychi Z. Primary syphilis of the fingers. Br J Vener Dis 1983;59:169-71.
  3. Fenton KA, Nicoll A, Kinghorn G. Resurgence of syphilis in England: time for more radical and nationally coordinated approaches. Sex Trans Inf 2001;77:309-10.
  4. Lacey HB, Higgins SP, Graham D. An outbreak of early syphilis: cases from North Manchester General Hospital. Sex Transm Infect 2001;77:311-13.

 

A real case of toxins being released by massage--Holm 2009: Acute effects after occupational endotoxin exposure at a spa

This is a case report of massage practitioners exposed to bacterial endotoxins in a work environment from a seaweed massage.

Holm M, Johannesson S, Torén K, Dahlman-Höglund A. Acute effects after occupational endotoxin exposure at a spa. Scand J Work Environ Health. 2009;35(2):153–155.

Objectives Two spa workers reported symptoms such as fever, shivering, palpitation, arthralgia, and diarrhea after performing seaweed massages on clients at a spa center. This study was carried out to determine whether the symptoms were related to exposure to endotoxin.

Methods Personal and stationary air sampling for the measurement of airborne endotoxin was carried out at the spa during the preparation of a bath and the following seaweed massage. In addition, the impact of storage time on the concentration of endotoxin in the seaweed was investigated.

Results The measurements confirmed exposure to aerosolized endotoxin at the spa (11 ng/m2[sic] and 22 ng/m3). The endotoxin concentration in the stored seaweed increased as the storage time increased, from 360 ng/g seaweed for fresh seaweed to 33 100 ng/g seaweed for seaweed stored for >20 weeks.

Conclusions Organic dust toxic syndrome was diagnosed for two workers who performed seaweed massages at a spa center at which aerosolized endotoxin was measured. In order to minimize entotoxin exposure during massages, it is important to use fresh seaweed or seaweed kept well cooled for no more than 2–3 weeks.

Key terms algae; case report; Fucus serratus; measurement; seaweed; work-related disease.

 

Because of copyright, I can't reproduce the article here, but you can access the free fulltext article for yourself.

Since I can't analyze the article line-by-line, here's a summary review of what I consider the important take-home points.

Case 1, with additional background knowledge information:

  • healthy 40-year-old man
  • had worked about 2 years in spa when he went to doctor about these symptoms--no longer employed at spa
  • after seaweed massages: complained of fever, arthralgia, shivering
    arthralgia (Ancient Greek αρθρος [arthros], "a joint, limb" + Ancient Greek ἄλγος [algos, pain]): pain in a joint, especially when not caused by arthritis (meaning, not inflammatory)
  • symptoms started about 5 hours after massage, lasted 6-7 hours, then went away completely
  • reports this has happened 15-20 times
  • lungs normal, based on testing--ruled out allergies and fungal/mold lung infection (Aspergillus)
    Aspergillus mold on a tomato:

    Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ad/Aspergillus_on_tomato.jpg accessed 2 August 2012

    Pulmonary aspergillosis ("the condition of Aspergillus mold infection in the lungs") seen under a microscope--notice the black dots and the rod-looking filaments in the lung tissue

    Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/Pulmonary_aspergillosis.jpg accessed 2 August 2012
     
  • diagnosed with suspected inhalation fever from endotoxins
    To understand what an endotoxin is, we first need to get on the same page about how the word "toxin" is used in biomedical science and practice. Wikipedia's information on the subject is a pretty good introduction to the issues involved:

Toxin: A toxin (from Ancient Greek: τοξικόν toxikon) is a poisonous substance produced within living cells or organisms; man-made substances created by artificial processes are thus excluded. The term was first used by organic chemist Ludwig Brieger (1849–1919)...Toxins can be small molecules, peptides, or proteins that are capable of causing disease on contact with or absorption by body tissues interacting with biological macromolecules such as enzymes or cellular receptors. Toxins vary greatly in their severity, ranging from usually minor and acute (as in a bee sting) to almost immediately deadly (as in botulinum toxin). (Wikipedia: "Toxin" accessed 2 August 2012)


Poisonous substance: In the context of biology, poisons are substances that cause disturbances to organisms,[1] usually by chemical reaction or other activity on the molecular scale, when a sufficient quantity is absorbed by an organism. The fields of medicine (particularly veterinary) and zoology often distinguish a poison from a toxin, and from a venom. Toxins are poisons produced by some biological function in nature, and venoms are usually defined as toxins that are injected by a bite or sting to cause their effect, while other poisons are generally defined as substances absorbed through epithelial linings such as the skin or gut. (Wikipedia: "Poison" accessed 2 August 2012)


This definition is why lactic acid and similar metabolites are not toxins, despite the fact that the term is often misused by MTs in that way. Lactic acid does not cause damage on the molecular scale, nor does its buildup cause a chemical reaction.

So a toxin is a biologically-produced substance that causes harm to body tissues on contact by a chemical reaction on a molecular scale.

Here, we are talking about endotoxins, as opposed to exotoxins.

Exotoxin: An exotoxin is a toxin secreted by a microorganism, like bacteria, fungi, algae, and protozoa. An exotoxin can cause damage to the host by destroying cells or disrupting normal cellular metabolism. (Wikipedia: "Exotoxin" accessed 2 August 2012)


Endotoxin: The term endotoxin was coined by Richard Friedrich Johannes Pfeiffer, who distinguished between exotoxin, which he classified as a toxin that is released by bacteria into the environment, and endotoxin, which he considered to be a toxin kept "within" the bacterial cell and to be released only after destruction of the bacterial cell wall. Today, the term 'endotoxin' is used synonymously with the term lipopolysaccharide, which is a major constituent of the outer cell membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Larger amounts of endotoxins can be mobilized if Gram-negative bacteria are killed or destroyed by detergents. The term "endotoxin" came from the discovery that portions of Gram-negative bacteria themselves can cause toxicity, hence the name endotoxin. Studies of endotoxin over the next 50 years revealed that the effects of "endotoxin" are, in fact, due to lipopolysaccharide.

The key effects of endotoxins on vertebrates are mediated by their interaction with specific receptors on immune cells such as monocytes, macrophages, dendritic cells, and others. Upon challenge with endotoxin, these cells form a broad spectrum of immune mediators such as cytokines, nitric oxide, and eicosanoids. [1] (Wikipedia: "Endotoxin" accessed 2 August 2012)


Lipopolysaccharide: a molecule with a lipid (fat) component and a saccharide (sugar) component. They are a very important component of the cell wall of Gram-negative bacteria.

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/82/LPS_en.svg accessed 2 August 2012


Gram-negative bacteria: Bacteria can be classified according to the biochemical properties of the cell wall that encloses the bacterial cell. Bacteria of one type, Gram-positive bacteria, have a cell wall structure that holds a purple stain, visible on a microscope slide, when dyed according to a particular cell-staining protocol. Gram-negative bacteria have a different cell wall structure that does not hold the stain from that dye, and so they do not appear purple. The same cell wall structure that does not hold the dye is also responsible for the endotoxins that Gram-negative bacteria release when the cell wall is broken, meaning that Gram-negative bacteria are often very strong pathogens (causes of disease).

In this photo, the small blue spheres (cocci) are a Gram-positive bacteria, so they stain purple. The long rods (bacilli) are a Gram-negative bacteria, so they do not hold the purple stain, and appear pink.

Source: "A Gram stain of mixed Staphylococcus aureus (Gram positive cocci) and Escherichia coli (Gram negative bacilli), the most common Gram stain reference bacteria" http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8f/Gram_stain_01.jpg accessed 2 August 2012

The first Gram-negative stain I ever did, Klebsiella pneumoniae, a Gram-negative rod, implicated in pneumonia and urinary tract infections. Stained 23 September 2009, Bellevue College, Bellevue, WA.

 

 

Case 2:

  • 27-year-old woman, history of celiac disease [American spelling], otherwise healthy

Coeliac disease [British spelling]...is an autoimmune disorder of the small intestine that occurs in genetically predisposed people of all ages from middle infancy onward. Symptoms include chronic diarrhoea, failure to thrive (in children), and fatigue, but these may be absent, and symptoms in other organ systems have been described...Coeliac disease is caused by a reaction to gliadin, a prolamin (gluten protein) found in wheat, and similar proteins found in the crops of the tribe Triticeae (which includes other common grains such as barley and rye). Wikipedia: "Coeliac disease" accessed 2 August 2012

 

  • had worked about 3 months at same spa as case 1 worked when she went to doctor about these symptoms--no longer employed at spa
  • after seaweed massages: complained of 12-18-hour-long episodes of shivering, palpitation, fever, and diarrhea, that then went away completely
  • diagnosed with suspected inhalation fever from endotoxins
  • symptoms started about 5 hours after facial seaweed or algae massage treatment for clients

Seaweed is a loose colloquial term encompassing macroscopic, multicellular, benthic marine algae. The term includes some members of the red, brown and green algae. (Wikipedia: "Seaweed" accessed 2 August 2012)


Algae are a very large and diverse group of simple, typically autotrophic [synthesizing their own food, instead of eating other living things] organisms, ranging from unicellular to multicellular forms, such as the giant kelps that grow to 65 meters in length. Most are photosynthetic like plants, and "simple" because their tissues are not organized into the many distinct organs found in land plants. The largest and most complex marine forms are called seaweeds. (Wikipedia: "Algae" accessed 2 August 2012)

Massagenerd has YouTube videos of how to perform a seaweed treatment--Spa Seaweed Treatment 1 of 2:

 

and Spa Seaweed Treatment 2 of 2




She makes what is, unfortunately, a very common mistake among MTs at the 30-second time-point. Where she says, "The seaweed mixture acts as a detoxification", that is simply factually wrong, and you should not believe that. It's a very common massage myth.

She also does something very, very right at the 17-second time-point, something that I was very happy to see: before actually applying the seaweed paste, she tested the temperature on a small spot with her client to make sure that it was not too hot.

You should always do that when applying any kind of heat therapy.

The maximum safe temperature for human skin is around 110 F, while the pain threshold is at about 105 F.

The most common regulatory standard for the maximum temperature of water delivered by residential water heaters to the tap is 120 degrees Fahrenheit (Source: http://www.ameriburn.org/Preven/ScaldInjuryEducator%27sGuide.pdf accessed 3 August 2012)

 

So tap water can actually be hot enough to burn the client's skin, and you should always check with the client to make sure the temperature of your heat therapy is safe and comfortable.

 

Based on the symptoms, test results, and apparent exposure to endotoxins, an investigation was carried out at the spa to detect whether employees were exposed to endotoxins present in the environment there.

At the spa, 1 kg of brown seaweed (Fucus serratus) was placed in a bathtub with water heated to 38°C. Clients were normally treated in the bathtub for about 30 minutes, including 10 minutes of massage. The storage time and handling procedure for the seaweed used on this occasion were not known.

 

Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/89/Fucus_serratus2.jpg accessed 2 August 2012

 

A sample was taken from the water prepared with seaweed, and it was sent to the laboratory for analysis. The sample was found to contain an endotoxin concentration of 800 ng/ml.

 

Later in the article, they point out that this number is 100 to 1000 times the amount acceptable to find in normal drinking water.

In another test at the same workplace,

The personal air sample contained an endotoxin concentration of 11 ng/m3, and that of the stationary sample was 22 ng/m3.

 

The investigators concluded that the turbid water,

 

 

caused by adding the seaweed to the bathwater, was forming an aerosol (a suspension of tiny particles in air), that was carrying the endotoxins into the workers' lungs.

 

Often the spa workers had several clients in succession, leading to extended exposure. However, there were no symptoms if exposure was avoided. Adding seaweed to the bath made the water somewhat turbid. It is likely that an aerosol was formed from small droplets or splashes being produced when the clients were massaged with the seaweed. It was concluded that the spa workers’ symptoms had probably been caused by the aerosolized endotoxin they were exposed to during the massage procedure.

 

They analyzed the seaweed to see if the amount of endotoxin increased as the seaweed was stored for longer times before being used.

Levels of endotoxin found in seaweed stored for longer times, measured in units of ng endotoxin/g seaweed

 

They found not only that it did increase with time, as expected, but also that gram-negative bacteria was present--that would account for the endotoxin, as we discussed previously about the lipopolysaccharides in the cell walls of Gram-negative bacteria as sources for endotoxins.

In conclusion, ODTS [organic dust toxic syndrome] was diagnosed for two staff members performing seaweed massages at a spa center at which aerosolized endotoxin was measured. Endotoxin was found in fresh seaweed, and the concentration increased markedly with an increase in the length of storage of the seaweed. In minimizing endotoxin exposure, it is important to use either fresh seaweed or seaweed kept well cooled for no more than 2–3 weeks in a refrigerator.

 

What do these case reports mean for your responsibilities toward your clients and your employees if you are a spa owner?

What do these case reports mean for your responsibilities toward your clients and your employer if you work as an employee or a contractor at a spa?

 


UPDATE, 3 August 2012, 10:34 AM PDT

Elsewhere, Robin Byler Thomas asked an excellent and profoundly client-centered question about this study:

What about the client's exposure?

 

A very important question.

What do we know about its answer from the article?

Were the clients exposed to endotoxins at all?

If they were exposed, were they affected by the exposure?

How did any potential client exposure compare to MT exposure?

What followup were the occupational health team able to take with the spa?

What changes in their procedures did the spa make in order to protect their clients and MTs from exposure to endotoxins?

 

 

 

 

Davis 2012: Therapeutic Massage Provides Pain Relief to a Client with Morton’s Neuroma: A Case Report

I want to thank the International Journal of Therapeutic Massage and Bodywork (IJTMB) for their open access policy permitting free use with proper attribution in noncommercial settings, which--along with the fair use principle--permits us to engage with the text of this article in depth.

Entries in the IJTMB are governed stylistically and ethically by the publication guidelines of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors' (ICMJE), Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals. Published articles are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 license. Accordingly, copyright retention by authors, first publication rights for the journal, free use with proper attribution in noncommercial settings, and prohibition of derivative works are all ensured.

--Glenn M. Hymel, From the Executive Editor's Perspective ... IJTMB, Vol 1, No 1 (2008)

Copyright Notice

Articles published in this journal [IJTMB] are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License (see http://creativecommons.org/  and  http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ ). Accordingly, the following conditions apply: (a) Copyright for articles published in this journal is retained by authors, with first publication rights granted to the journal. (b) By virtue of their appearance in this open access journal, articles are free to use, with proper attribution, in educational and other non-commercial settings. (c) Derivative works are not allowed in that a user may not alter, transform, or add additional content to an article published in this journal.

 

 


Therapeutic Massage Provides Pain Relief to a Client with Morton’s Neuroma: A Case Report

Faith Davis , BA, RMT, NCTMB, AOS
Private Practice, Boulder, CO, USA.

Background

Morton’s neuroma is a common cause of pain that radiates from between the third and fourth metatarsals and which, when symptomatic, creates sensations of burning or sharp pain and numbness on the forefoot. Many conservative and surgical interventions are employed to reduce associated pain, but not enough research has been conducted to recommend patients to any one approach as the most reliable source of pain management.

Purpose

The objective of this case report is to describe the effect of massage therapy on one woman with symptomatic Morton’s neuroma.

Participant

A physically active 25-year-old female with diagnosed symptomatic Morton’s neuroma who has not found relief with previous conservative intervention.

Intervention

Six session of massage therapy once weekly for 60–75 minutes focused on postural alignment and localized foot and leg treatment. The client also completed an at-home exercise each day. Change was monitored each week by the massage therapist reassessing posture and by the client filling out a pain survey based on a Visual Analog Scale.

Results

The client reported progressive change in the character of the pain from burning and stabbing before the first session to a dull, pulsing sensation after the third session. She also recorded a reduction in pain during exercise from a 5/10 to 0/10 (on a scale where 10 is extreme pain).

Conclusion

This study describes how massage therapy reduced pain from Morton’s neuroma for one client; however, larger randomized control studies need to be done in order to determine the short- and long-term effects of massage therapy on this painful condition.

KEYWORDS: intermetatarsal neuroma , foot health , entrapment neuropathy , Mulder’s sign , forefoot , deep transverse metatarsal ligaments

INTRODUCTION

Morton’s Neuroma

Morton’s neuroma is a common pathology of the foot in the United States. It is prevalent in people aged 15–50, but is most commonly seen in middle-aged patients(1,2). It occurs ten times more frequently in women than in men(3). Sometimes called intermetatarsal neuroma, it is an entrapment neuropathy associated with compression of the common interdigital nerve beneath the transverse metatarsal ligament(4). As a result of this entrapment, the common interdigital nerve swells distal to the deep transverse metatarsal ligament, most commonly between the third and fourth metatarsal bones(5). Pain results when the metatarsals compress and grind the swollen nerve(5). Not all Morton’s neuromas are symptomatic (painful)( 1), but those that are symptomatic are characterized by paraesthesia—numbness, burning, or sharp pain—on the bottom of the foot that radiates from the third and fourth metatarsals into the third and fourth phalanges. The pain and numbness caused by symptomatic Morton’s neuroma can vary between irritating and debilitating, and treatments are equally variable. Interventions range from conservative to surgical. Conservative treatments include footwear changes, steroid injections, physical therapy, and topical or NSAID pain relievers(1,6). If these fail to relieve the pain, surgery to either remove the neuroma or release the pressure from the ligament is often the next step.

Anatomy and Pathology

Morton’s neuroma is not a true neuroma. A true neuroma is a proliferation of nerve axons, or a tumor of neurons. Morton’s neuroma is instead a lesion which, “consists of perineural fibrosis, local vascular proliferation, edema of the endoneurium, and axonal degeneration”(7) (Figure 1). Because it is a compression neuropathy of the common interdigital nerve, some prefer the term interdigital neuritis as a more accurate representation of the problem(8). The lesion will be referred to by its common name “Morton’s neuroma” for the duration of this report.

 

 

Figure 1   Image of Morton’s Neuroma.

While the exact cause of Morton’s neuroma is not known, it is thought to be linked to hypermobility of the metatarsals(5) and repetitive motions which grind the nerve bundle between the metatarsals. Anecdotal evidence suggests that Morton’s neuroma may be related to crush injuries or repetitive running or jumping motions where the foot strikes with such compressive force that the metatarsals are damaged or the nerve is in some way impinged. Damage or injury to this area of the forefoot is more susceptible to lesion formation because of the large nerve bundle created when the lateral plantar nerve and the medial plantar nerve come together at the third and fourth metatarsals(9).

Structural misalignment and mechanical abnormalities of the forefoot may also be contributing factors in creating symptomatic Morton’s neuroma(8). One structural concern is that if the intermetatarsal ligament is lax, the interdigital nerve tissue will shift into the area between the metatarsal heads and be subject to compressive trauma(6).

The pain caused by Morton’s neuroma is typically associated with standing activity and may be linked to wearing heels or tight shoes that compress the toe box(9). Although it does not necessarily follow a common pattern, Morton’s neuroma pain is usually “triggered by walking and relieved by removing shoes and by various manipulations of the forefoot, but pain may occur at night or without apparent precipitating factors”(10).

Identifying Morton’s Neuroma

The clinical test for Morton’s neuroma is to “compress the foot by applying pressure to the medial and lateral aspects of the foot at the metatarsophalangeal joints,” in turn putting pressure on the nerves(5). A positive test is indicated by a sharp pain at the location of the neuroma that mimics the pain the patient normally feels(5). Patients with Morton’s neuroma may also exhibit Mulder’s sign, an audible and “palpable click when pressure is applied to the sole of the foot and the metatarsals are subsequently squeezed together”(7), but this is only seen in 20% of those with symptomatic Morton’s neuroma(8). In some cases, magnetic resonance imagery (MRI) is used to identify atypical presentations, but one review suggests these presurgery MRIs may be a “waste of resources and set a dangerous medico-legal precedent”(11). Ultrasound and an X-ray can also be used to determine the size of the Morton’s neuroma and to eliminate the possibility of complications in bony structures that can cause forefoot pain(3,6,7,8).

Treatment of Morton’s Neuroma

As previously mentioned, conservative treatments include changes in footwear, orthoses, metatarsal pads, taping, steroid injections, cryotherapy, physical therapy, and topical or NSAID pain relievers(1,2,6). Initially, a person suffering from Morton’s neuroma pain may try low-heeled, wide shoes or custom shoe orthoses. This can be especially effective in alleviating pain if high heels or shoes with a tight toe-box have been a source of pain. Many doctors and physical therapists recommend a period of rest and a dramatic reduction in activities that elicit pain(12,13,14). Corticosteroid injections are another common intervention to diagnose and mitigate pain for a few weeks at a time(8,9). Multiple injections may create local problems including atrophy of the forefoot and blanched skin(8). In one case report, functional fascial taping was effectively used to manage pain associated with Morton’s neuroma(6), but this procedure must be examined in a larger study before any clear correlation can be made. Physical therapy may be focused on pain-free flexibility, strengthening, and balance exercises to combat atrophy from disuse and promote soft-tissue strength and flexibility(14). Some acupuncturists believe Morton’s neuroma can be managed through traditional Chinese medicine(15), although this method is also lacking in available research reports or trials.

If conservative interventions fail to relieve the pain, surgery to remove the neuroma or to release pressure from the ligament may be recommended. Fifteen to twenty percent of these surgeries will not relieve the pain, and may be followed by complications such as local postsurgical infections, scar tissue, and soft tissue damage to the muscles and skin at the site of incision which impair functional foot movement, and recurring neuromas after the initial surgery(6,8). This highlights the need for larger randomized control studies of nonsurgical treatment.

Massage & Morton’s Neuroma

In a study of 85 patients, those with symptomatic (painful) Morton’s neuroma found relief by removing shoes and gentle self-massage of the forefoot(1). In one review of research on the efficacy of manual therapies on many different musculoskeletal disorders, the evidence was inconclusive, but favorable toward the use of manipulation and mobilization of the foot to decrease pain associated with Morton’s neuroma(16). Another study agreed that it was possible manipulation and mobilization provided short-term relief as a treatment of Morton’s neuroma, but drew no definitive conclusion(17). Research focused on other areas of Morton’s neuroma treatment, as well as many medically affiliated websites, have also suggested that local massage provides relief from pain(2,9,10,12,13,14).

Case Report Objective

Surprisingly few case reports and research studies are available that focus on the effect of manual soft-tissue manipulation by a health care professional to manage pain associated with Morton’s neuroma. Despite the high incidence of Morton’s neuroma, reviews of current research in 2004 and 2007 concluded that there is insufficient evidence in randomized control trials to determine the efficacy of either surgical or nonsurgical interventions(17,18). While more research has been conducted since these reviews, Morton’s neuroma continues to be a complex condition with a wide variety of conservative and surgical interventions. The objective of this case report is to describe the effect of massage therapy on one client’s pain symptoms associated with Morton’s neuroma over the course of six weeks of massage once a week and a daily home care exercise. While the findings will only describe the efficacy of massage with one person, this massage therapist hopes it will add to the literature leading to a larger and more comprehensive study of massage and Morton’s neuroma.

METHODS

Client Profile

The client is a 5 foot 10 inch, 145-pound, 25-year-old female with symptomatic Morton’s neuroma between the third and fourth metatarsals in her left foot as diagnosed by her trauma doctor after X-rays to exclude a foot fracture. The client is physically active; she is an avid runner, swimmer, and biker who exercises four to six times per week. She competes in running races ranging in length from 5K–12K. She considers her job to be stressful, and she typically exercises for stress reduction. At the time of starting the massage therapy treatments, she had been unable to run for the three months prior due to pain. Her job requires many hours on her feet, setting up outdoor research projects and lifting heavy objects.

Upon diagnosis with Morton’s neuroma, the client’s physician recommended rest (one month with no exercise) and a cortisone injection. The client complied by receiving the shot and ceasing running, but was unable to be off of her feet at work. After one month of inactivity and the cortisone shot, the pain had lessened slightly, but was still persistent, both during activity and while resting. The client wears store-bought arch support at work and in her running shoes on a daily basis. She does not wear tight shoes or high heels. Relevant medical history includes Achilles tendonitis in the right foot seven years prior, as well as a fracture in the right foot six years prior. Her left foot pain is worsened by running, jumping, and squeezing the foot. During the course of massage treatment, the client continued to wear store-bought arch support, but received no other care for the condition.

A postural assessment in the first session revealed a moderately elevated left hip and left shoulder. She had moderate bilateral protraction of the scapulae and severely rounded shoulders, as well as moderate forward head posture. The client had no conditions which contraindicated massage. She reported consistent burning, throbbing, stabbing, and aching foot pain, both during activity and when resting. The orthopedic test for Morton’s neuroma, squeezing inward from the medial and lateral sides of the metatarsals(5), resulted in pain consistent with Morton’s neuroma between the third and fourth metatarsals in the client’s left foot. This result was consistent with the physician’s diagnosis. The orthopedic test for Morton’s neuroma was applied by the massage therapist as a teaching tool and acknowledgement of how this condition could be tested for without a doctor’s diagnosis.

The client’s stated goal for the sessions was to find relief from the Morton’s neuroma pain and return to her physically active lifestyle.

Treatment Plan—Intervention

Treatment Overview

The massage therapy intervention consisted of the orthopedic test for Morton’s neuroma and visual and palpation postural assessment, followed by six treatments with postural assessment at the start and end of each session. The client received treatment once a week for 60–75 minutes over the course of six consecutive weeks. In each session, the time was divided as follows: 5 minutes of visual and palpation postural assessment, 30 minutes of general postural realignment using various massage therapy techniques specific to the postural assessment findings, 30 minutes of treatment massage therapy to the foot and leg, and 5 minutes of reassessment.

Massage Intervention—Postural Alignment

People with Morton’s neuroma may develop modified gaits or change functional movement to avoid placing weight on the most painful parts of the foot. The client may have first developed a tendency to rely heavily on the left foot years earlier when her right Achilles tendon was inflamed, and then a year later she broke her right foot. With the onset of Morton’s neuroma pain, the client may have developed a second gait modification to take pressure off of the pain in her left foot. These modifications can effect body alignment, starting with the foot and ankle and leading to subsequent compensation patterns which progress up the entire body. Improper alignment can then place more stress on the symptomatic Morton’s neuroma.

The literature reviewed in this report about Morton’s neuroma cites only mobilization and manipulation of areas local to the Morton’s neuroma pain(1,2,9,10,12,13,14,16,17). There was no research available to set a precedent for addressing postural alignment as a means to creating a change in the pain associated with Morton’s neuroma. In a holistic view of the body, where the body is seen as an interconnected whole, a presenting symptom is treated not only at the area of pain, but also in the areas of misalignment and irregularity that may be contributing to the pain. When the myofascial relationships in the body shift, there are both “local and distant effects on the body—not just on muscles and fascia, but also on nerves and vasculature”(5). Postural alignment was addressed with this client to create better balance and structural integrity in an effort to reduce the negative effect of repetitive motion and poor body alignment, as these increase friction and stress on the Morton’s neuroma. Treating the client’s muscular imbalances was an important step in combating compensation patterns the client had adopted to avoid painful motions of the foot.

The postural section of the session focused on encouraging the client’s alignment toward neutral through myofascial release using a combination of myofascial trigger point therapy, longitudinal stroking, and facilitated stretching to balance functional postural dysfunction of the hips and shoulder.

Individual techniques were chosen using the evidence informed practice model. The massage therapist took into consideration desired treatment and effect as described in Rattray and Ludwig,(5) personal experience, and methods to most effectively create change in the client’s body. Techniques for this specific client focused on facilitated stretching of the quadratus lumborum and trigger-point therapy to the left gluteus medius to create a level pelvis, facilitated stretching of the pectoralis major, as well as facilitated stretching and longitudinal stroking of the bilateral upper trapezius and levator scapula to balance the shoulder girdle.

Massage Intervention—Local Foot and Leg Treatment

Foot and leg massage therapy was implemented based on the suggestions in other studies that local massage provided relief from pain(1,9,10). Since many muscles of the leg have attachment sites in the foot, both the smaller intrinsic foot muscles and the larger muscles of the leg with foot insertion sites were treated. The specific foot and leg treatment protocol was derived from the section on “Lower Extremity and Foot Dysfunction” in the bodywork manual for the Lumbar and Lower Extremity module of Boulder College of Massage Therapy’s Orthopedic and Sports Massage Certificate Program(19). These techniques included myofascial release and trigger-point therapy to the tibialis posterior, flexor hallucis longus, and flexor digitorum longus, longitudinal stroking of the gastrocnemius and soleus, passive calf, and Achilles tendon stretches, and cross-fiber friction of fibularis longus, gastrocnemius, and soleus attachments.

At-home Exercise

The client was provided an at-home exercise to do several times each day, focused on returning integrity to the deep transverse metatarsal ligament. Physical therapy suggestions, as well as research that advocates correcting ligament laxity and mechanical abnormalities, led the massage therapist to believe a daily at-home exercise would help progress continue between massages(6,8,14).

The client was asked to sit with legs extended in front of the body and then to bring the metatarsals toward the shins and knees (dorsiflexion), without curling the toes (E.L. Calenda, oral communication, August 2010). The client performed the exercise first using her hand to place the foot in the proper position and then, as she became more skilled and gained fine motor control of the foot, she practiced without the aid of her hands (Figure 2).

 

 

Figure 2   Client at Home Exercise. The left foot (a, top) before deep transverse metatarsal ligament exercise. The left foot (b, botton) during unassisted deep transverse metatarsal ligament exercise.

The purpose of this exercise was to create more integrity in the deep transverse metatarsal ligament first by fostering the mind-body connection and establishing optimal foot position, and then by strengthening the actual muscular structures that maintain the optimal position.

Treatment Plan—Assessments

Initial Intake

The client filled out an extensive health history that included questions about how long she had been experiencing pain, treatment recommendations up to that point in time, whether or not she followed these recommendations, how often and what kind of exercise she engaged in, what she did for work, what shoes she wore, whether or not she wore shoe orthoses, previous injuries to either foot, hobbies that include time on her feet, and any activities that eased or worsened the pain. This questionnaire established the history, activities, and factors that may influence the pain associated with the client’s Morton’s neuroma.

Orthopedic Assessment

The orthopedic test for Morton’s neuroma(5), squeezing inward from the medial and lateral sides of the metatarsals, resulted in pain consistent with Morton’s neuroma between the third and fourth metatarsals in the client’s left foot. Although the test was unnecessary in this case because of the diagnosis as Morton’s neuroma by a physician, it is included here as an educational piece for other massage therapists working with Morton’s neuroma.

Postural Assessment

Before and after the massage at the first session and at each subsequent session, a complete visual and palpation postural assessment of the client was taken as she was standing, from both head-on and side views. Structural alignment and rotation of shoulders and hips and subsequent muscular imbalances were assessed visually by the massage therapist. Postural misalignment was assessed in relation to anterior, posterior, and lateral pelvic tilt, as well as spinal rotation and scapular imbalance. The massage therapist then palpated the same bony landmarks that were used in the visual assessment (anterior–superior iliac spine, posterior–superior iliac spine, and iliac crest and inferior and superior scapular angles) to confirm visual findings. These imbalances in the body were assessed because structural misalignment can exacerbate foot irritation by creating undue stress on particular areas, especially during repetitive motion.

Visual Analog Scale

Describing the change in pain symptoms associated with Morton’s neuroma in relation to massage therapy is the primary concern of this case report. This made it essential to give the client a way to subjectively measure her experience of the changes. The Visual Analog Scale (VAS) allowed the client to measure her pain from week to week on a continuous scale. The VAS is particularly useful in a report where the scale is only describing one person’s pain perception and would not be as applicable in a study with multiple clients because it does not offer a consistent measurement between people(20).

The client received three VASs at each session that were filled out during the course of the session. The first scale asked her to rate her average pain over the course of the week, the second asked her to rate her pain in the moment before beginning massage, and the third asked her to rate her pain at the end of the massage. Each scale went from zero to ten, with zero signifying no pain and ten signifying extreme pain. There was space provided at the end of the questionnaire for her to add any relevant qualitative changes in pain or variation in activity during the previous week.

RESULTS

Final Intake

The client reported progressive change in the character of the pain from burning and stabbing before the first session, to a dull, pulsing sensation after the third session. She also reported a gradual decrease in the duration of pain after physical exercise. Further, the client was able to maintain decreased pain while increasing exercise and completing several short running races.

Orthopedic Assessment

The foot squeeze test was not repeated at the end of the massage series because the goal of the sessions was not to eliminate the Morton’s neuroma, but rather to notice the changes, if any, in pain.

Postural Assessment

The client’s alignment did not visibly change during the course of the sessions. Palpable changes in posture were limited. Following the sixth session, there was a decrease in the hypertonicity of the bilateral upper trapezius muscles and a release of trigger points in the left gluteus medius.

Visual Analog Scale

As shown in the graph (Figure 3), the client experienced a decrease in pain during physical activity, moving from five to zero on a scale of 1 to 10 (10 indicating the most pain). She also experienced a reduction in average pain while resting, pain at the moment of the start of the massage, and pain after the massage.

 

 

Figure 3   Pain Measured Over Time.

DISCUSSION

The objective of this case report was to describe the effect of massage therapy on one client’s pain symptoms associated with Morton’s neuroma in response to six weeks of weekly massage and daily home care exercise. The treatment series was effective for this client, particularly in reducing the pain during and after exercise, which allowed her to return to her usual activities. The improvement in pain could be the result of the multifaceted treatment plan which consisted of massage, continued rest without exercising during the first three weeks of massage, and compliance with the home care exercise which created a more stable environment in the foot. Each of these treatments has a similar effect in helping clients reduce pain, according to anecdotal evidence and other case reports(1,2,9,10,12,13,14,16,17). There was no deviation from the treatment plan worth noting. Client and therapist were both vigilant in maintaining consistency of sessions and daily repetition of the at-home exercise. Pain reduction and the client’s return to a normal level of activity may have contributed to decreased stress which, in turn, would help reduce pain.

Measurement Tools

The addition of a variety of objective measurement tools including muscle strength testing, the use of a goniometer, and evaluation based on established pain and mobility scales in future case reports may strengthen the consideration of massage therapy as an intervention for pain associated with Morton’s neuroma. Assessing posture with a grid and plum line(21) would allow precise measurement of postural imbalances, and would facilitate noticing small, measurable—but not visually perceivable— changes. A goniometer would be useful to create precise measurements rather than visual estimates. Individual muscle strength testing(5,21) of leg muscles would direct the massage therapist to work specific muscles and be able to retest the same muscles to find correlations, if any, between changes in muscle tone and strength and change in pain. Assessing range of motion at the initial session, half way through, and at the final session would also give a good measurement of changes in foot and ankle mobility.

Using previously established scales would allow future reports to be easier to replicate. The use of an established scale for measuring muscle tone when palpating would be necessary, especially in a larger scale study involving multiple clients and therapists. An established scale has the benefit of being more precise than the descriptors mild, moderate, and severe. The Foot Function Index as a means of measuring foot pain and disability only came to the attention of this massage therapist after completion of the case report(22). This scale would be an excellent and replicable tool for measuring and comparing pain and activity changes between individual clients.

Recommendations for Future Studies

The results of this case report are not conclusive and warrant further investigation to validate massage treatment as an adjunctive or principal option for treatment of Morton’s neuroma. Future case reports using the additional measurement tools as previously mentioned would be the first step to creating a body of literature measuring the efficacy of massage in reducing pain associated with Morton’s neuroma. Larger studies could then be done to demonstrate statistical significance of massage treatment.

Determining the impact of postural alignment on Morton’s neuroma requires a study of much longer duration, and faces the challenge of working with individual postural misalignment under controlled conditions.

In this report, once the client’s pain had been moderately reduced in the first three weeks of treatment and she was able to return to exercise, her pain continued to decrease during the final three weeks of treatment. In future studies, tracking the link between decreased pain and improved quality of life would help to establish either a direct or indirect connection between the two.

In this case report, leg and foot massage seemed more effective than postural alignment because so little alignment change was observed. A two-armed study (leg and foot massage only, leg and foot massage combined with postural alignment) might relate the efficacy of these two methods.

CONCLUSION

Morton’s neuroma is a condition of the forefoot which, when symptomatic, causes pain that limits mobility and regular daily activity. Many conservative and surgical interventions are employed to reduce associated pain, but not enough research has been conducted to recommend patients to any one approach as the most reliable source of pain management. This study describes how massage therapy can play a role in reducing pain from Morton’s neuroma; however, larger randomized control studies need to be done to determine the short- and long-term effects of massage therapy on this painful condition.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST NOTIFICATION

The author declares there are no conflicts of interest.

REFERENCES

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2  Berry K, Gonzalez P, Bowman RG. Physical Medicine and Treatment for Morton Neuroma. Available from: http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/308284-overview. Updated March 30, 2012. Accessed January 25, 2012.

3  Summers A. Diagnosis and treatment of Morton’s neuroma. Emerg Nurse . 2010;18(5):16–17.
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4  Hughes, RJ, Ali K, Jones H, et al. Treatment of Morton’s neuroma with alcohol injection under sonographic guidance: follow-up of 101 cases. AJR . 2007;188(6):1535–1539.
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5  Rattray F, Ludwig, L. Clinical Massage Therapy: Understanding, Assessing And Treating over 70 Conditions . Elmira, ON: Talus Incorporated; 2000.

6  Spina R, Cameron M, Alexander R. The effect of functional fascial taping on Morton’s neuroma. Australas Chiropr Osteopathy . 2002;10(1):45–50.

7  Quinn TJ, Jacobson JA, Craig JG, et al. Sonography of Morton’s neuromas. AJR . 2000;174(6):1723–1728.
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8  Kay D, Bennett GL. Morton’s neuroma. Foot Ankle Clin . 2003;8(1):49–59.
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9  Peng H, Swierzewski SJ III. Morton’s Neuroma. Available from: http://www.healthcommunities.com/mortons-neuroma/about-mortons-neuroma.shtml. Published December 31, 1999. Updated May 16, 2011. Accessed January 26, 2012.
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10  Guiloff RJ, Scadding JW, Klenerman L. Morton’s metatarsalgia. Clinical, electrophysical and histological observations. J Bone Joint Surg Am . 1984;66-B(4):586–591.

11  Sharp RJ, Wade CM, Hennessy MS, et al. The role of MRI and ultrasound imaging in Morton’s neuroma and the effect of size of lesion on symptoms. J Bone Joint Surg Am . 2003;85- B(7):999–1005.
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12  American College of Foot and Ankle Surgeons. Morton’s Neuroma. Available from: http://www.foothealthfacts.org/footankleinfo/mortons-neuroma.htm. Updated August 23, 2010. Accessed September 16, 2010.
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13  Mayo Clinic. Morton’s Neuroma. Available from: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/mortons-neuroma/DS00468. Published & Updated October 5, 2010. Accessed September 16, 2010.
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14  PhysioAdvisor. Morton’s Neuroma. Available from: http://www.physioadvisor.com.au/13489750/mortons-neuroma-metatarsalgia-physioadvisor.htm. Published 2008. Accessed Jan 24, 2012.
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15  Joswick D. Treating Morton’s Neuroma with TCM. Available from: https://www.acufinder.com/Acupuncture+Information/Detail/Treating+Morton's+Neuroma+with+TCM. Published 2012. Accessed January 24, 2012.
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16  Bronfort G, Haas M, Evans R, et al. Effectiveness of manual therapies: the UK evidence report. Chiropractic & Osteopathy . 2010;18(3):1–33. Available from: http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/pdf/1746-1340-18-3.pdf. Accessed January 24, 2012.

17  Govender N, Kretzmann H, Price JL, et al. A single-blinded randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial of manipulation and mobilization in the treatment of Morton’s neuroma. J Amer Chiropr Assoc . 2007;44(3):9–18.

18  Thomson CE, Gibson JN, Martin D. Interventions for the treatment of Morton’s neuroma. Cochrane Library. 2009. Available from: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD003118.pub2/abstract.

19  Quinn C, Morgareidge K, Chandler C, et al. Lumbar and Lower Extremity Treatment Manual . Boulder, CO: Boulder College of Massage Therapy. Orthopedic and Sports Massage Certificate Program; 2006.

20  Crichton, N. Visual analog scale (VAS) [Information Point]. J Clin Nurs . 2001;10:706.

21  Kendall FP, McCreary EK, Provanve PG, et al. Muscles: Testing and Function, with Posture and Pain , 5th edition. Baltimore, MD: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2005.

22  Budiman-Mak E, Conrad KJ, Roach KE. The foot function index: a measure of foot pain and disability. J Clin Epidemiol . 1991;44(6):561–570.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Many thanks to my case report supervisor Elaine Calenda, RMT, AOS who listened to my questions, ideas, and often helped to steer me back on course. A heartfelt thanks to friends, colleagues, and editors who willingly shared their time and knowledge as I wrote this case report. My gratitude also to the Massage Therapy Foundation which recognized this report with a bronze award in the 2011 Student Case Report Contest.

Corresponding author: Faith Davis, BA, RMT, NCTMB, AOS, Private Practice, 726 C Pearl St., Boulder, CO 80302, USA, E-mail: faith.davis@me.com

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COPYRIGHT

Published under the CreativeCommons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License. ( Return to Text )

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE AND BODYWORK , VOLUME 5 , NUMBER 2 , JUNE 2012

 

International Journal of Therapeutic Massage & Bodywork
ISSN 1916-257X


 

 

 

 

 

Ethics, professionalism, and scope of practice: A bodyworker prescribes muscle strengthening exercises

"Ethically Speaking: The Advice Trap", Dianne Polseno, December 21, 2002 accessed 15 May 2012

...While it's inappropriate to advise a client on such personal matters as relationship issues or financial problems, it may not be so easy to recognize inappropriate advising when our suggestions and recommendations have to do with the client's health. For example, we may want to share information with our clients about products or methods that we have personally found to be effective. Or, in contrast, we may want to caution clients about products or methods that we have personally found to be ineffective. Furthermore, our other life experiences and education may encourage us to feel qualified to offer information that we believe will be helpful, when in actuality, to do so would be stepping outside of our scope of practice. Several situations come to mind that may help explain this point. These are actual cases that have been conveyed to me in recent years:...

A bodywork professional who worked out regularly offered his clients advice on how to strengthen muscles. He had no formal education or credentials in personal or athletic training. A client, who happened to have an undiagnosed rotator cuff tendinitis, followed the therapist's advice, and it resulted in further injury to the tendon. The client may need surgery.

In all of these cases, it is understandable that the massage therapist did not intend to cause harm to the client. Yet, despite the intention to be helpful, the suggestions, feedback and advice were inappropriate and out of the scope of a massage therapist's practice. In each of the above situations, consider the following guidelines regarding scope of practice and appropriate professional behavior:...

The teaching of muscle-strengthening exercises is not within the scope of practice of a massage therapist. Professionals, such as physicians, chiropractors, physical therapists, athletic trainers and personal trainers, are qualified to do so. If a client would benefit from such measures, the safest and most ethical action would be to refer him or her to a qualified professional for the proper education.

Advice-giving is a trap that is easy to fall into and difficult to get out of. Remember that, in general, when we share comments, opinions, helpful ideas and judgments about any nonmassage matters, we are sharing "our stuff," and we have most likely moved into unethical, and perhaps illegal, territory.

 

 

 

Ethics, professionalism, and scope of practice: An MT imposes religious/spiritual beliefs and practices on clients

"Ethically Speaking: The Advice Trap", Dianne Polseno, December 21, 2002 accessed 15 May 2012

...While it's inappropriate to advise a client on such personal matters as relationship issues or financial problems, it may not be so easy to recognize inappropriate advising when our suggestions and recommendations have to do with the client's health. For example, we may want to share information with our clients about products or methods that we have personally found to be effective. Or, in contrast, we may want to caution clients about products or methods that we have personally found to be ineffective. Furthermore, our other life experiences and education may encourage us to feel qualified to offer information that we believe will be helpful, when in actuality, to do so would be stepping outside of our scope of practice. Several situations come to mind that may help explain this point. These are actual cases that have been conveyed to me in recent years:...

A massage therapist, who had devout spiritual beliefs and practices, freely shared her views and ideas with her clients. At some point during the sessions, she brought this topic into the conversation, and she often encouraged her clients to adopt a more spiritual lifestyle. She had spiritual literature in her office, and she offered to help clients learn how to pray and meditate for stress reduction. Clients soon sought out other massage therapists in her area, and reported to the new therapists that they felt pressured and turned off by her approach...

In all of these cases, it is understandable that the massage therapist did not intend to cause harm to the client. Yet, despite the intention to be helpful, the suggestions, feedback and advice were inappropriate and out of the scope of a massage therapist's practice. In each of the above situations, consider the following guidelines regarding scope of practice and appropriate professional behavior:...

Discussion of religious beliefs or spiritual practices should not be brought into the client/therapist relationship by the massage therapist. Such matters are highly personal and confidential. Moreover, if the conversation in a session is directed toward this, or any other aspect of your life, it is likely that your focus is in the wrong place. The most effective sessions are client-centered, not therapist-centered...

Advice-giving is a trap that is easy to fall into and difficult to get out of. Remember that, in general, when we share comments, opinions, helpful ideas and judgments about any nonmassage matters, we are sharing "our stuff," and we have most likely moved into unethical, and perhaps illegal, territory.

 

 

 

Ethics, professionalism, and scope of practice: An MT prescribes herbs to replace prescription medication and makes a psychological diagnosis of physical pain

"Ethically Speaking: The Advice Trap", Dianne Polseno, December 21, 2002 accessed 15 May 2012

...While it's inappropriate to advise a client on such personal matters as relationship issues or financial problems, it may not be so easy to recognize inappropriate advising when our suggestions and recommendations have to do with the client's health. For example, we may want to share information with our clients about products or methods that we have personally found to be effective. Or, in contrast, we may want to caution clients about products or methods that we have personally found to be ineffective. Furthermore, our other life experiences and education may encourage us to feel qualified to offer information that we believe will be helpful, when in actuality, to do so would be stepping outside of our scope of practice. Several situations come to mind that may help explain this point. These are actual cases that have been conveyed to me in recent years:...

A client went to see a massage therapist for neck and left upper extremity pain. In giving her medical history, she reported that she was taking antidepressant medication. The massage therapist, a proponent of herbal remedies, cautioned the client about the side effects of the medication, and recommended that the client experiment with an herbal antidepressant that she, herself, had found to be highly effective. The massage therapist went on to say that the left upper extremity pain could be a manifestation of the client's relationship issues with a parent; the therapist had seen this to be the case with many clients. The client, feeling angry and violated, never returned for another visit with the massage therapist...

In all of these cases, it is understandable that the massage therapist did not intend to cause harm to the client. Yet, despite the intention to be helpful, the suggestions, feedback and advice were inappropriate and out of the scope of a massage therapist's practice. In each of the above situations, consider the following guidelines regarding scope of practice and appropriate professional behavior:...

A massage therapist must never tell a client to start or stop taking medications, and recommending herbs is the same as prescribing medicine, which is out of a massage therapist's scope of practice. No judgments should be made about the emotional or psychological status of a client, and massage therapists should refrain from sharing their opinions unless they have the appropriate professional training and qualifications...

Advice-giving is a trap that is easy to fall into and difficult to get out of. Remember that, in general, when we share comments, opinions, helpful ideas and judgments about any nonmassage matters, we are sharing "our stuff," and we have most likely moved into unethical, and perhaps illegal, territory.

 

 

 

Ethics, professionalism, and scope of practice: An MT advises a client to stop seeing a chiropractor

"Ethically Speaking: The Advice Trap", Dianne Polseno, December 21, 2002 accessed 15 May 2012

...While it's inappropriate to advise a client on such personal matters as relationship issues or financial problems, it may not be so easy to recognize inappropriate advising when our suggestions and recommendations have to do with the client's health. For example, we may want to share information with our clients about products or methods that we have personally found to be effective. Or, in contrast, we may want to caution clients about products or methods that we have personally found to be ineffective. Furthermore, our other life experiences and education may encourage us to feel qualified to offer information that we believe will be helpful, when in actuality, to do so would be stepping outside of our scope of practice. Several situations come to mind that may help explain this point. These are actual cases that have been conveyed to me in recent years:

A client was seeing a chiropractor for low-back problems. The client decided to also see a massage therapist at the same time, thinking that the two modalities would work well together. At the first visit, the massage therapist advised the client not to continue seeing the chiropractor until she had at least three massages to "give massage a chance, since massage therapy was less invasive." The client, confused about what to do, canceled her appointment with the chiropractor and explained the reason to the receptionist. The chiropractor is in the process of taking legal action against the massage therapist for practicing medicine without a license...

In all of these cases, it is understandable that the massage therapist did not intend to cause harm to the client. Yet, despite the intention to be helpful, the suggestions, feedback and advice were inappropriate and out of the scope of a massage therapist's practice. In each of the above situations, consider the following guidelines regarding scope of practice and appropriate professional behavior:

A massage therapist has no right to impose his or her own beliefs and judgments about whatever healing modalities that a client decides to explore. It is never appropriate to tell a client not to follow the directions of a doctor, chiropractor, physical therapist or other primary-care health provider. In the event that we are concerned about the judgment of another primary health-care provider, we must tread very cautiously if we choose to present our views, taking care to emphasize that we have no authority or professional opinion in the matter, and that our comments are based solely on our opinion...

Advice-giving is a trap that is easy to fall into and difficult to get out of. Remember that, in general, when we share comments, opinions, helpful ideas and judgments about any nonmassage matters, we are sharing "our stuff," and we have most likely moved into unethical, and perhaps illegal, territory.

 

 

Cunningham 2011: "Case report of a patient with chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy treated with manual therapy (massage)"

This is an abstract only, as the article itself is behind a paywall.

Cunningham JE, Kelechi T, Sterba K, Barthelemy N, Falkowski P, Chin SH. Case report of a patient with chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy treated with manual therapy (massage). Support Care Cancer. 2011 Sep;19(9):1473-6. Epub 2011 Jul 16. PMID: 21766161

Hollings Cancer Center, and Division of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29425, USA. cunninj@musc.edu

Abstract

PURPOSE:

Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a common, miserable, potentially severe, and often dose-limiting side effect of several first and second-line anti-cancer agents with little in the way of effective, acceptable treatment. Although mechanisms of damage differ, manual therapy (therapeutic massage) has effectively reduced symptoms and improved quality of life in patients with diabetic peripheral neuropathy.

METHODS:

Here, we describe application of manual therapy (techniques of effleurage and petrissage) to the extremities in a patient with grade 2 CIPN subsequent to prior treatment with docetaxel and cisplatin for stage III esophageal adenocarcinoma. Superficial cutaneous temperature was monitored using infrared thermistry as proxy for microvascular blood flow.

RESULTS:

By the end of the course of manual therapy without any change in medications, CIPN symptoms were greatly reduced to grade 1, with corresponding improvement in quality of life. Improvements in superficial temperature were observed in fingers and toes.

CONCLUSIONS:

Manual therapy was associated with almost complete resolution of the tingling and numbness and pain of CIPN in this patient. Concurrently increased superficial temperature suggests improvements in CIPN symptoms may have involved changes in blood circulation. To our knowledge, this is the first report of using manual therapy for amelioration of CIPN.



 

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