Clinical Studies
"We have shown that heat will
result in alterations in the body, that will diminish pain and
chronic inflammation", says Thomas Lundeberg, associate professor
in physiology at the Karolinska hospital (ref; The Swedish journal
Health "Hälsa" nr 9, 2000). A doctor interested in this subject is
Dr Rose-Marie Brinkeborn, who has conducted a clinical study on the
efficacy of Back on Track (BoT) braces together with colleagues and
physiotherapists.
The study included 120
patients who had experienced pain caused by either arthrosis of the
knee or tennis elbow for a period of at least 3 months. The
subjects were randomly separated into two equal sized groups, and
their levels of pain were immediately evaluated on a scale ranging
from little pain to considerable pain. One group of patients were
required to use the braces for a three week period, then stop using
them and revert to their own previous methods of pain management
for the next three weeks. Simultaneously, the other half of the
patients, who had been instructed to rely on their normal methods
of pain management for the first three week period, were now
instructed to use the braces for the
ensuing three weeks.
The overall results of the
study are not yet finalised, but it has been established already
that more than half of them had less pain when they were using the
braces. Those with tennis elbow often went back to normal, and some
of the patients with knee arthrosis, who had been living with pain
for a long time and were booked for prosthesis surgery, felt so
relieved from pain that they could exercise again, and chose to
postpone their surgery!
In the daily paper Svenska Dagbladet
(January 25th, 2003), Dr Xyao Huishen who worked at the
rehabilitation medical clinic at Karolinska hospital expressed:
"These braces have no adverse effects if the right size is used".
In a later paper, Massage and Bodycare 1/2004, Dr. Huishen, after
gathering additional knowledge of the products, states: "In
principle, besides drugs, there is nothing else that offers such
reproducible results on patients who have inflammation generated
pain."
