Ease pain by taking a good look at yourself
They were asked to move their two arms in
different directions while watching their reflection – creating a mismatch
between the actual motion of the hidden arm and the apparent motion viewed in
the mirror.
Ease pain by taking a good look
at yourself
• 13:10 01 November
2005
• NewScientist.com news
service
• Gaia
Vince
Some patients suffering chronic pain in their limbs
have found an unlikely source of relief – mirrors. Researchers say the
drug-free treatment works on people with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS)
and repetitive strain injury (RSI) because it tricks the brain into correcting
its distorted image of the body.
CRPS occurs in about one-third of people who
fracture their wrists: they suffer unexplained persistent pain in their hand,
arm or shoulder once the supportive plaster cast is removed. The pain can be so
bad that some patients beg for their arm to be amputated, says Candy McCabe, who
developed the novel mirror therapy at the University of Bath in the
UK.
In the study, eight CRPS patients sat in front long
mirrors. These were placed so that each person could see only the healthy half
of their body, along with another reflection of the same
half.
The result was that the side of the body with the
painful arm was hidden from their view and it appeared to the patients as if
they had two healthy arms. They were told to concentrate hard on the image and
try to believe that what they saw was a true depiction of
themselves.
“Three of them were cured instantly; the
others took a little longer,” says McCabe. “But once the mirror was
removed, the pain returned.” However, with continued mirror therapy, six
people were completely cured. The two exceptions had conditions complicated by
limb ulcers and actual physical distortions.
Refined body image
Since the experiment, McCabe says she has
successfully treated many other CRPS, and RSI patients, with the technique. She
believes the pain results from a mismatch in the way the brain perceives the
body and the actual condition of the body.
The brain is constantly sending signals to the body,
predicting things like the shape and weight of the limbs, and their location.
The sensory nervous system responds by sending information back, allowing the
brain to refine its body image.
“When the arm is immovable in a plaster cast a
mismatch occurs," McCabe says. "The brain sends out signals to the arm, but gets
nothing back, so it triggers its own pain sensation in response." When the cast
is removed, most people recover from the confusion spontaneously, but a third
continue to feel pain. "The mirror tricks the brain into resetting its body
image and stops the pain,” she says.
She thinks a similar mismatch occurs in people who
develop RSI. "When a typist stares at a still screen, or a violinist at sheet
music, while their hands move rapidly, it causes confusion,” McCabe
says.
Mild tingling
In a further study to test their brain mismatch
theory, McCabe and colleagues at Bath Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic
Diseases conducted an experiment on 41 healthy volunteers. As before, each was
sat in front of a mirror which bisected them in two, giving them a symmetrical
image of their body, and were asked to believe that the image truly represented
them.
They were asked to move their two arms in different
directions while watching their reflection – creating a mismatch between
the actual motion of the hidden arm and the apparent motion viewed in the
mirror.
“Almost instantly they began to feel
sensations in the arm they couldn’t see, which ranged from mild tingling
through to uncomfortable levels of pain, McCabe said. “Some found it too
painful to last the 20-second test duration.”
Peter Buckle, an RSI expert at Robens Centre for
Health Ergonomics at Surrey University, says it is well-known that the brain can
be confused by creating a difference between actual and apparent motion. But he
does not believe this is a factor in RSI. “RSI has been around for
hundreds of years and describes very real physical symptoms including
inflammation and nerve damage," he says.
Posted: Sat
- November 19, 2005 at 09:35 PM