The researchers studied patients with fibromyalgia, a long-term serious medical condition that causes widespread pain across the body. The condition affects between two and four percent of the global population. Currently, aerobic exercise is a standard recommendation for symptom management, yet many patients have trouble adhering to the guidelines with their fluctuating symptoms.
For this reason, a group of researchers set out to compare the impact of tai chi on pain management to aerobic exercise. They examined the effects on 226 adults with fibromyalgia, who had experienced chronic pain for an average of nine years and who had never tried tai chi or aerobic exercise for pain management. The average age of the participants was 52 and 92 percent of the population they examined was female.
Participants were randomly assigned to tai chi or aerobic exercise. Those in the aerobic group participated in the exercise twice weekly for 24 weeks. Those in the tai chi group were broken into four sub-groups: those who did tai chi once weekly for 12 weeks, those who did tai chi twice weekly for 12 weeks, those who did tai chi once weekly for 24 weeks, and those who did tai chi twice weekly for 24 weeks.
Tai Chi Further Improves Chronic Pain Symptoms Than Aerobic Exercise
All of the patients showed improvement in their physical and emotional symptoms after the exercise regimens were completed at the end of the experiment, but one option was better. The patients who did tai chi for 24 weeks showed the most improvement of all the participants, but those who did tai chi for only 12 weeks still showed higher levels of improvement than those who did the aerobic exercises. Surprisingly, there were no increased benefits for those who did tai chi more than once a week.
“Tai chi mind-body treatment results in similar or greater improvement in symptoms than aerobic exercise, the current most commonly prescribed non-drug treatment, for a variety of outcomes for patients with fibromyalgia,” write the authors. “This mind-body approach may be considered a therapeutic option in the multidisciplinary management of fibromyalgia.”
The authors did highlight several limitations to the study, however. Firstly, the patients were aware of their assigned groups. It was also noted that attendance between the two groups differed, which may have had an impact on the results. The strengths of this study compared to others, though, were the size and diversity of the population group as well as the follow-up period, which was longer than a number of other similar studies.
Related:
Fibromyalgia Related Chronic Pain Reduced with Meditation Therapy
Chronic neck pain can be relieved with tai chi: Study