Allowing yourself a few minutes of downtime significantly boosts mental and physical relaxation. Research by psychologists at the University of Konstanz observed higher levels of psychological and physiological relaxation in people after only ten minutes of receiving a massage. Even ten minutes of simple rest increased relaxation, albeit to a lesser degree than massage. The findings, reported on 8 September 2020 in the journal Scientific Reports, provide the first indication that short-term treatments can robustly reduce stress on a psychological and physiological level by boosting the body's principal engine for relaxation - the parasympathetic nervous system (PNS). Stress is known to have negative consequences for health and disease. However, our bodies have an inbuilt regenerative system, the PNS, to ward off stress during times of threat. Launching a relaxation response is thus key to protecting our health and restoring balance in our body. Massage has been used to improve relaxation, yet no systematic approach exists to robustly confirm its effect on the PNS and whether or not this could be used as rehabilitation for patients suffering from stress-related disease. Boosting the body's engine for relaxation This study indicates that massage is an easy-to-apply intervention that can boost the body's principal engine for relaxation - the PNS - and also lead to a reduction in perceived mental stress. The discovery that massage is effective on the level of both psychology and physiology via the PNS will pave the way for future studies on understanding the role of relaxation on stress. "To get a better handle on the negative effects of stress, we need to understand its opposite - relaxation," says Jens Pruessner, head of the Neuropsychology lab and Professor at the Cluster of Excellence "Centre for the Advanced Study of Collective Behaviour" at the University of Konstanz. "Relaxation therapies show great promise as a holistic way to treat stress, but more systematic scientific appraisal of these methods is needed." Standardised testing approach Researchers from the Department of Psychology in Konstanz developed a standardised approach for testing if tactile stimulation could improve mental and physical relaxation. They applied two different ten-minute massages on human subjects in the laboratory to test: A head-and-neck massage was designed to actively stimulate the PNS by applying moderate pressure on the vagal nerve, which is the largest nerve running to the PNS. Then a neck-and-shoulder massage with soft stroking movements was designed to examine whether just touch can also be relaxing. Finally, a control group of participants sitting quietly at a table was tested for the effect of rest without tactile stimulation. Physiological relaxation was gauged by monitoring the heart rate of participants and measuring heart rate variability (HRV), which indicates how flexibly the PNS can respond to changes in the environment. The higher the HRV, the more relaxed is the body. Psychological relaxation was gauged by asking participants to describe how relaxed or stressed they feel. Ten minutes of resting or receiving either massage resulted in psychological and physiological reduction in stress. All participants reported that they felt more relaxed, and less stressed, compared with before the treatments. Further, all participants showed significant increases in heart rate variability, which demonstrates that the PNS was activated and the body physiologically relaxed just by resting alone. The physiological effect was more pronounced when participants received a massage. It was, however, not important whether the massage was soft or moderate - tactile contact in general seemed to improve the relaxation of the body. Small moments with big impact "We are very encouraged by the findings that short periods of dis-engagement are enough to relax not just the mind but also the body," says Maria Meier, a doctoral student in the lab of Neuropsychology and first author on the study. "You don't need a professional treatment in order to relax. Having somebody gently stroke your shoulders, or even just resting your head on the table for ten minutes, is an effective way to boost your body's physiological engine of relaxation." By developing a standardised method for robustly testing and validating relaxation therapies, the study allows further experiments to test the effects of additional relaxation interventions that could be used in prevention or rehabilitation programmes for people suffering from stress-related diseases such as depression. "Massage, being such a commonly used relaxation therapy, was our first study," says Meier. "Our next step is to test if other short interventions, like breathing exercises and meditation, show similar psychological and physiological relaxation results." Facts:
* Original paper: Standardized massage interventions as protocols for the induction of psychophysiological relaxation in the laboratory: A block randomized control trial. Meier M, Unternaehrer E, Dimitroff SJ, Benz A, Bentele UU, Schorpp SM, Wenzel M, Pruessner JC. Scientific Reports. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-71173-w Link: http://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-71173-w * Study by University of Konstanz psychologists tests if short, standardized massage protocols can relax the body and the mind * Results show that receiving a short massage of ten minutes leads to physiological relaxation by activating the body's parasympathetic nervous system (PNS), which is responsible for regeneration and stress reduction. Ten minutes of rest also increased relaxation, but to a lesser degree than massage * Study lead by Prof. Jens Pruessner, professor for Neuropsychology at the University of Konstanz and member of the Cluster of Excellence "Centre for the Advanced Study of Collective Behaviour" at the University of Konstanz. * This is the first study that uses a standardised method to show that short and easy-to-apply relaxation techniques can activate the body's regenerative system for fighting stress - offering new perspective on how we can treat stress-related disease. * Funding: the work was in part supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy - EXC 2117 -and the Swiss National Science Foundation.
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