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Equine Magnetic Therapy, Inc
Natural Health Magazine, August, 1998
Natural Healing—By Sarah Fremerman
New Evidence is giving credence to this curious form of pain relief—and may be
silencing long-time critics in the process.
Meet Magnet, P.I.
In 1993, a patient of Carlos Vallbona, M.D., told him that a cushion made with
small magnets had cured his lower back pain. Vallbona was skeptical. “I thought
it was a psychological effect,” he recalls. “There was nothing in the scientific
literature that indicated magnets were helpful.”
At the time, most scientists would have agreed and some, like William Jarvis,
Ph.D., executive director of the National Council Against Health Fraud, still
do. “There’s a lot of huckstering going on,” Jarvis says. “Marketers are making
extravagant claims for which there is no evidence.”
Physicians and scientists ridiculed magnet therapy with good reason. Until last
year, there was not a speck of scientific evidence showing that magnets did what
patients–and magnet manufacturers–claimed they did. In fact, one informal study,
conducted at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York in 1991 by physical therapist
Benjamin Gelfand, tracked a group of 24 patients suffering from bursitis,
tendonitis, and lower back pain. The patients wore magnets 12 hours a day for up
to six weeks and none experienced any pain relief that could be attributed to
the magnets. Gelfand concluded that magnet therapy merited no further
investigation.
But magnet therapy wouldn’t go away. Anecdotal evidence continued to mount,
despite the inability of science to explain how magnets worked. Chronic pain
sufferers like Vallbona’s patient, went on claiming that magnets worked for
them. Consider these three stories:
•Golfer Jim Colbert’s chronic back pain forced him to quit playing
professionally. Then a fellow player recommended magnet therapy. “When you have
the kind of back I have, you try anything,” says Colbert, who returned to
professional golf four years later. He now straps several magnets to his back
when he plays and sleeps on a magnetic mattress pad every night. Today he is one
of the top–ranked players on the circuit.
•Ryan Vermillion, physical therapist and athletic trainer for the Miami
Dolphins, says he regularly treats football players with magnets, including
quarterbacks Craig Erickson and Dan Marino. Vermillion says that although
there’s no way to be sure magnets are helping the players’ injuries to heal more
quickly, he has noticed differences since he started treating them with magnets
three years ago.
“The players are saying they’re feeling better, but there are also objective
things,” Vermillion explains. “After applying the magnets you will get some
decrease in swelling, or changes in post–surgical swelling or hematomas. You can
actually see the swelling decrease faster.”
•Gail Banta of Weymouth, Mass., suffered from bursitis in her hips and arthritis
in her back for 11 years. She had fibromyalgia, a painful neuro-muscular
condition whose cause is unknown. When her husband told her what he had heard
about magnets from a hunting guide in Canada, she decided to order a magnetic
mattress pad. The result astonished her.
“In one week of sleeping on the pad, my backache was gone.” Banta says she had
been taking 12 pills a day for pain since the onset of her condition and that
she had stopped needing them within two weeks of purchasing the mattress pad.
(She was so impressed that she became a distributor for a Japanese magnet
company that sells products in the United States).
Facts in Favor
After hearing story after story like these from his patients, Vallbona, the
director of the Post–Polio Clinic at the Institute for Rehabilitation and
Research, affiliated with Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, was interested
enough to attend a 1994 conference on the effects of magnetic fields. What he
learned led him to suspect there might be something to magnet therapy after all.
He and his colleague Carleton Hazelwood, M.D., designed a double–blind study to
test the effect of magnets on 50 patients suffering from pain associated with
post–polio syndrome. What he found piqued the interest of even the staunchest
critics of magnet therapy.
In the study, Vallbona examined the effects of one specific type of magnet known
as a “concentric circles” magnet. He had some subjects hold these permanent
magnets (permanent magnets have a static magnetic field) on points where they
felt the most intense pain, and others hold inactive magnets. All were told to
keep them in place for 45 minutes. After the magnets were removed, seventy–five
percent of the patients who used active magnets reported a significant reduction
in pain. Only 19 percent of the patients in the control group, however,
experienced even a small decrease in pain. No side effects were reported.
Vallbona published these results in the November 1997 issue of the Archives of
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.
Vallbona’s study did not explore how long this effect might last, but he has
continued to follow the progress of participants, and the preliminary results
look promising. “Many patients reported that the effect lasted not only hours,
but days, weeks, even months in some cases,” he says. “So we have the impression
that the relief brought about by the magnets is lasting longer than relief by
painkilling drugs.”
Vallbona is no the only researcher finding promising results. In a controlled
setting, neurobiologist Alvaro Pascual–Leone, M.D., Ph.D., and his colleagues at
Harvard Medical School treated 17 severely depressed patients with a technique
called “rapid–rate transcranial magnetic stimulation.” The treatment involves
using an electromagnet–produced by running an electric current through a coil of
wire–to stimulate the activities of certain areas of the brain. After five daily
sessions of the treatment, 11 of the 17 patients showed a marked improvement
that lasted for two weeks after the treatments and no on reported significant
adverse effects. Pascual–Leone published his findings in the July 1996 issue of
the Lancet.
Several related studies on electromagnetic brain stimulation, including one at
the National Institutes of Health, are currently exploring the use of this
technique to treat a range of neurological disorders, including epilepsy,
Parkinson’s disease, and even learning disabilities. Ann Gill Taylor, director
of the Center for the Study of Complementary and Alternative Therapies in
Charlottesville, Virginia, has just begun a year–long study designed to
investigate the effect of using static magnetic fields to treat 100 patients
suffering from fibromyalgia.
Although intrigued by research results, Gelfand and Jarvis say they are still
waiting for more scientific evidence that magnet therapy works. The Food and
Drug Administration (FDA), which as not approved the use of permanent magnets to
treat pain, has approved several independent review boards to track current
research in the field.
Leading Theories
No one knows for sure how magnetic fields interact with the human body. But
there are a few leading theories:
Blood flow
Experts agree that magnets probably help increase blood flow to a painful area
of the body, which carries more oxygen to the region, decreases inflammation,
and relieves pain. According to biophysicist Marko Markov, Ph.D., magnets
probably stimulate blood flow because blood is composed of positively and
negatively charged particles. Markov recently conducted a study–which has not
yet been published–that found a substantially increased blood flow to an area of
a horse’s leg where a magnet was applied.
Pain perception
Vallbona suggests that the magnetic field may affect pain receptors in the
painful area, eliciting a slight anesthetic effect, or that the magnetic field
might be transmitted via blood vessels to the brain, which then releases
endorphins, chemicals that act as natural pain relievers.
Theories are one thing, facts are another, which is why Vallbona has plans for
further research on magnets. In the meantime, since he completed his study with
the post–polio patients, he has been successfully treating his own injured
shoulder with two small magnets. And he now takes along several magnets whenever
he travels–just in case he needs them.
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