TUESDAY, Sept. 28 (HealthDay News) -- A new Swiss study reports
that a form of meditation known as mindfulness may help patients
with multiple sclerosis.
Patients with MS -- a nervous system disease that typically
surfaces in early adulthood and can cause muscle weakness,
coordination/balance problems and thinking and memory problems,
among other symptoms -- often suffer from depression and
anxiety.
The study compared multiple sclerosis patients who meditated to
MS patients who didn't. Dr. Moses Rodriguez, a professor of
neurology and immunology at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.,
who's familiar with the study's findings, said meditation is safe
and cheaper than the drugs that MS patients take.
"Patients should try it and see if it is helpful for them," Rodriguez added.
Previous research has suggested that half of MS patients suffer
from depression during their lives and that anxiety disorders
affect one in four. About two-thirds say they feel fatigued, with
up to 50 percent saying fatigue is their most disabling
symptom.
Researchers at University Hospital Basel randomly assigned 150
patients to either take part in an eight-week meditation program
based on "mindfulness" or receive regular medical care. The study
defined the meditation, which included yoga, as "nonjudgmental
awareness of moment-to-moment experience."
The participants in the mindfulness meditation program reported
lower levels of fatigue and depression for up to six months than
those receiving standard care. And the meditation participants had
better quality of life, according to the study findings, published
in the Sept. 28 issue of the journal
Neurology.
Those in the meditation program, in fact, improved in almost all
the measures of fatigue, depression, anxiety and quality of life,
while those who received usual medical care declined slightly on
most of the measures. For instance, those who took mindfulness
training saw their depressive symptoms drop by more than 30 percent
than those study participants who took no training.
"The patients responded very positively to the program," said study author Paul Grossman. "There was a very small number of patients that did not complete the course (5 percent), and the attendance rate was extremely high: On average over 90 percent of all sessions were attended, although many patients traveled several hours to attend the weekly sessions and people with MS often have difficulties walking and other symptoms that make travel difficult."
"Also, patients reported a high degree of satisfaction in meeting personal goals that were individually stated before the intervention started," Grossman added.
In an accompanying commentary in the journal, two physicians
from the Cleveland Clinic noted that the findings of the study,
which they called "solidly designed," were limited because the
researchers didn't compare meditation to another form of extra
treatment. That makes it difficult to understand if meditation is
uniquely beneficial, they wrote.
But neurologist Dr. Jinny Tavee, one of the commentary authors,
said she has seen positive effects of mindfulness in her own
practice. The problem with medications, she said, is that patients
are told, " 'Here are some drugs that make you sad, tired and
depressed, but nothing will effectively take away your disease.'
They're left with no effective treatments."
Enter mindfulness meditation. "You learn to objectify what
you're feeling, be it pain or anxiety or depression, and see it as
a separate entity that's not part of yourself. It helps you let it
go," said Tavee. "You're getting to the heart of the symptom rather
than just covering it as you do with medications."
Tavee said she sometimes sees furrowed eyebrows when skeptical
patients hear about this approach. "But the thing is that this is
free," she said. "You can learn how to do it by yourself. There's
no side effects, and if it doesn't work for you, you've lost
nothing. It's one of those things that can help and won't
hurt."
More information
For more about
multiple sclerosis, try the U.S. National Library of Medicine.