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Mind-Body Medicine

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Title: Mind-Body Medicine


1
Mind-Body Medicine
  • Tara Saenz

2
Learning Objectives
  • Define mind-body medicine.
  • According to the national survey, what are the
    most common mind-body medicine techniques
    (besides prayer) used by adults in the U.S.?
  • Why is the western world less accepting of
    mind-body medicine?
  • What occurred in the early 1900s that sparked an
    interest in the research of mind-body medicine?
  • What two positive outcomes of mind-body medicine
    interventions is there considerable evidence for?

3
Introduction
  • Mind-body medicine focuses on the interaction
    among the brain, mind, body, and behavior, and
    the powerful ways in which emotional, mental,
    spiritual, and behavioral factors can directly
    affect health.

4
Mind-Body Medicine Techniques
  • Cognitive-behavioral therapies
  • Relaxation
  • Hypnosis
  • Imagery
  • Meditation
  • Yoga
  • Biofeedback
  • Tai Chi
  • Qigong
  • Group Support
  • Autogenic Training
  • Spirituality

5
Prevalence
  • According to a national survey in 2002
  • 30 of adults in the U.S. were currently using
    one or more of the following mind-body medicine
    techniques
  • Relaxation
  • Visual/Guided Imagery
  • Biofeedback
  • Hypnosis
  • 50 of adults in the U.S. were using prayer

Wolsko PM, et al. Use of mind-body medical
therapies. Journal of General Internal Medicine.
20041943-50
6
Background
  • The concept of mind-body medicine dates back more
    than 2000 years
  • Integral to the healing approaches of traditional
    Chinese and Ayurvedic medicine
  • Hippocrates believed that treatment could only
    occur with the consideration of attitude,
    environmental influences, and natural remedies.

7
The East vs. The West
  • The acceptance of mind-body medicine is divided
    between eastern and western cultures
  • The East still value the integrated approach of
    mind-body medicine
  • Beginning in the 16th and 17th centuries, the
    West began to separate the dimensions of the mind
    from the physical body
  • Redirection of Science
  • Technological Advances
  • Discovery of bacteria and antibiotics
  • Fixing or curing an illness became a matter of
    science and took precedence over the healing of
    the soul.

8
Stress Response and Placebo Effect
  • Walter Cannon Fight or Flight
  • Sympathetic and adrenal activation in response to
    perceived danger
  • Henry Beecher, M.D. Placebo Effect
  • Low supply of morphine during WWII
  • Found that pain could be controlled by saline
    injections
  • As a result, since the 1960s, mind-body
    interactions have become an extensively
    researched field.

9
Focus of Research
  • Mind-Body Interventions and Disease Outcomes
  • The treatment of disease
  • Decrease pain
  • Improve mood, QOL, and coping
  • Improve disease or treatment related symptoms
  • Mind-Body Influences on Immunity
  • Positive and negative effects of emotions on
    peoples susceptibility to infection
  • Meditation and Imaging
  • Use of fMRI to investigate the effects of
    meditation on the activation of regions of the
    brain
  • Placebo Response
  • Cognitive and conditioning mechanisms
  • Stress and Wound Healing
  • Positive and negative effects of mood or stress
    on the rate of wound healing
  • Surgical Preparation
  • Reduce discomfort and adverse effects

10
Study 1 The evaluation of mind/body
intervention to reduce psychological distress and
perceived stress in college studentsJournal of
American College Health200250281-287
11
Study 1
  • Specific Aim
  • The effectiveness of a mind-body intervention on
    psychological distress and perceived stress in
    college students
  • Study Design
  • Randomized, placebo-controlled
  • Subjects
  • 128 college students
  • 25 freshman/sophomores
  • 41 junior/seniors
  • 34 graduate students
  • Median age 21 years old

12
Study 1
  • Treatment
  • Six 90-minute group-training sessions

13
Study 1
  • Outcome Measures
  • Symptom Checklist-90-Revised
  • Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory
  • Perceived Stress Scale
  • Health-Promoting Lifestyle Profile II
  • A demographic and health habits survey

14
Study 1
  • Results
  • 90 students completed the post-assessment measure
  • Significantly greater reductions in psychological
    distress, state anxiety, and perceived stress
    were found in the experimental group

15
Study 1
  • Conclusions
  • A 6-week RR and CBI training program for students
    can significantly reduce self-reported
    psychological distress, anxiety, and the
    perception of stress.
  • Found a trend toward improvements for the
    intervention group on trait anxiety and
    health-promoting lifestyle profiles.

16
Study 2 Efficacy of functional relaxation in
comparison to terbutaline and a placebo
relaxation method in patients with acute
asthmaPsychotherapy and Psychosomatics2001701
51-157
17
Study 2
  • Specific Aim
  • The effectiveness of functional relaxation (FR)
    on pulmonary function in patients with acute
    asthma in comparison to inhaled terbutaline (IT)
    and a placebo relaxation technique (PRT)
  • Study Design
  • Randomized, prospective, single-blind,
    placebo-controlled, crossover experimental
    investigation
  • Subjects
  • 21 asthmatics with acute bronchoconstriction
  • 7 male 14 female
  • Average age 48.9 years

18
Study 2
  • Treatment
  • On 3 consecutive days they were given either
  • A 5-minute verbal standard instruction in
    elementary exercises of FR, which they were to
    practice during subsequent body plethysmographic
    measurement
  • IT (a fast-acting bronchodilator)
  • An unspecific PRT
  • Each subjects tried all 3 treatments in random
    order

19
Study 2
  • Outcome Measures
  • Standard pulmonary function measurements measured
    by a body plethysmograph

20
Study 2
  • Results
  • There was a significant decrease in specific
    airway resistance with FR, which was not as
    pronounced as IT, but it was significantly
    greater than with the PRT

21
Study 2
  • Conclusions
  • This study shows that clinically relevant effects
    can be achieved for patients with asthma through
    mind-body interaction, which can be triggered by
    reproducible procedures
  • Further development of the FR approach could lead
    to a non-pharmacological and effective
    supplementary treatment for asthma

22
Other Evidence
  • Evidence from randomized controlled trials and
    systematic reviews of the literature suggest
  • Mechanisms may exist by which the brain and
    central nervous system influence immune,
    endocrine, and autonomic functioning, which is
    known to have an impact on health.
  • Multi-component mind-body interventions may be
    appropriate adjunctive treatments for coronary
    artery disease and certain pain-related
    disorders, such as arthritis.

23
Continued
  • Multimodal mind-body approaches, such as
    cognitive-behavioral therapy, can be effective
    adjuncts in the management of chronic conditions
  • An array of mind-body therapies when employed
    pre-surgically, may improve recovery time and
    reduce pain following surgical procedures.
  • Neurochemical and anatomical bases may exist for
    some of the effects of mind-body approaches.

24
Summary Recommendations
  • Considerable evidence that mind-body
    interventions have positive effects on
    psychological functioning and QOL
  • Physical and emotional risks are minimal
  • Mind-body interventions can be taught easily
  • Mind-body medicine should be used in conjunction
    with modern medicine as a combined approach to
    improving health

25
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