Month: February 2026

How Specific and Contextual Effects Shape Outcomes in Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation

This large meta-analysis examined how much of the benefit from common physical therapy interventions for musculoskeletal pain (mobilization, manipulation, soft tissue techniques, taping, dry needling, exercise therapy) is due to the specific treatment effect versus nonspecific and contextual factors (often labeled placebo effects). Sixty-eight studies were included in the review (participants: n = 5238), and

Manual Therapy: What Therapists Believe vs What Patients Believe

Understanding how manual therapy works depends not only on research evidence but also on the beliefs of both therapists and patients. Two recent studies—one surveying German physical therapists and the other interviewing patients in the United States—offer an interesting contrast. Together, they highlight an important clinical reality: therapists and patients often think differently about what

Manual Therapy: What Do Therapists Believe Is Really Happening?

One of the biggest challenges in healthcare is translating research into everyday clinical practice. We have growing evidence about how manual therapy works at a biological level, but it’s not always clear whether this science shapes what therapists believe—or how they explain treatment effects to patients. A recent national survey of 569 German physical therapists

Abdominal Massage, the Gut–Brain Axis, and Insomnia

Insomnia is the most common sleep disorder, affecting around 10–20% of people, and it often becomes chronic. Beyond feeling tired, persistent poor sleep is linked with higher risks of cardiovascular disease, metabolic disruption, inflammation, and impaired cognition. While Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is the gold standard, access can be limited, and sleep medications

Massage and Neuroplasticity: How Therapeutic Touch Shapes the Brain

For many therapists, the effects of massage are obvious in practice: pain reduces, breathing slows, tissues soften, and patients feel calmer. But beneath these visible changes lies something even more powerful — neuroplasticity. Neuroplasticity is the nervous system’s ability to reorganize its structure and function in response to experience. In the context of massage therapy,

What Does fMRI Tell Us About Massage?

A look inside the brain’s networks of touch, safety, and pain If EEG shows when the brain changes during massage, fMRI shows where those changes happen. Functional MRI doesn’t measure electrical activity directly; instead, it tracks blood flow linked to neural activity. This allows researchers to see which brain regions and networks are engaged by

What EEG studies really tell us about massage and the brain

Massage is often described in terms of muscles, fascia, or circulation, yet some of the most intriguing insights now come from the brain. Neuroimaging and neurophysiological tools such as EEG, fMRI, and fNIRS have been used to ask a deceptively simple question: what happens in the brain when the body is touched in a therapeutic

How massage works

Massage is often described in terms of muscles, fascia, or circulation, yet some of the most intriguing insights now come from the brain. Neuroimaging and neurophysiological tools such as EEG, fMRI, and fNIRS have been used to ask a deceptively simple question: what happens in the brain when the body is touched in a therapeutic

Neuroplasticity and the Lasting Effects of Massage Therapy

Massage is often thought of as a short-term intervention—something that relaxes muscles, eases pain, or calms the nervous system for a few hours. Neuroscience research, however, paints a deeper and more interesting picture. When massage is repeated over time, it appears capable of engaging neuroplasticity: the brain’s ability to reorganize its activity, connectivity, and chemistry