"The groundwork of all happiness is health." - Leigh Hunt

Aerobic Exercise or Tai Chi for Fibromyalgia – Which is Better?

Follow me on Twitter. @RobShmerling

Fibromyalgia is a typical condition that causes chronic body-wide pain and affects hundreds of thousands of individuals. The cause is unknown, and medicines approved to treat it are sometimes ineffective, cause uncomfortable side effects, or each. Saying we’d like higher treatments for fibromyalgia.

Non-drug treatment of fibromyalgia – especially exercise – is an important a part of treatment. But the final thing people on this condition need to do is exercise! Their pain and fatigue, which is characteristic of the disease, makes physical activity more of a wishful considering than a reality for many fibromyalgia victims. Nevertheless, studies show that so long as people start “low and slow” (exercising at low intensity and for brief durations, and really progressively increasing each), physical activity could be tolerated. can and should even be enjoyed.

Is there a “best” style of exercise for fibromyalgia?

Oh A new study compared two forms of physical activity in individuals with fibromyalgia: aerobic exercise (akin to brisk walking, as is usually really useful) and tai chi, an ancient type of martial arts often practiced for its health advantages. Is. Past studies have shown that tai chi could be effective for individuals with fibromyalgia.

Researchers enrolled 226 adults with fibromyalgia and randomly assigned 151 to learn and practice tai chi (a few times every week for 12 or 24 weeks), while 75 received standard “moderate intensity” exercise. Assigned to take part in aerobic exercise (twice every week for six months, with the goal of accelerating heart rate to the aerobic range during exercise). The study subjects were representative of “real-world” patients who varied in age, had other health problems, and took multiple medications.

What did the study show?

Compared to aerobic exercise, study participants assigned to tai chi groups:

  • Attended their assigned exercise classes more reliably.
  • reported significant improvement on a standardized survey of fibromyalgia symptoms when asked six months after treatment initiation.
  • There was less concern
  • felt higher capable of cope and had higher self-efficacy (a belief that they were capable of improve their symptoms through their very own actions);
  • reported more improvement after 24 weeks of tai chi (versus 12 weeks of tai chi)

Both groups reduced pain reliever use to an identical extent. And no serious injuries or treatment uncomfortable side effects were reported.

Does this mean that everybody with fibromyalgia should try tai chi?

As is true for many treatments, there isn’t a single best choice in all situations. It may not work well for individuals who don't like (or don't give it a likelihood) tai chi, or feel they’ll't participate due to poor balance, weakness, or other health issues.

Also, the study itself isn't the ultimate word on which activities are best for individuals with fibromyalgia. Not everyone could have access to high-quality tai chi instructors (although on this study, the outcomes were consistent across the three instructors). Skeptics will indicate that since the study subjects knew what treatment they were getting, the placebo effect could have caused the outcomes. And, in fact, there are countless other exercise programs that weren’t included on this study.

Stop by to learn more about exercise and other treatments for fibromyalgia.

This recent research suggests that as a substitute of current recommendations for aerobic exercise (akin to brisk walking), tai chi could also be just pretty much as good or higher for many individuals with fibromyalgia.

In the near future, it is probably going that we are going to have higher ways to diagnose and treat fibromyalgia. In addition, a greater understanding of why it develops in the primary place may result in prevention methods. Until then, I'll keep telling my patients what I've been telling them for years: When fibromyalgia gets higher, it's actually because of something the patient does, not due to medication I prescribe. From. Being physically lively appears to be a very vital a part of the approach. Based on the outcomes of this latest research, tai chi could also be place to start out.