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Feb. 4, 2010
Objective
To evaluate the effectiveness and tolerability of two pool-based physical therapies,
stretching and Ai Chi, in fibromyalgia symptomatology and sleep quality.
Methods
Eighty-one patients, randomly assigned to stretching (n=39) or Ai Chi (n=42), received 18
physiotherapy sessions and were evaluated at baseline, at treatment termination, and after
4 and 12 weeks of follow-up. Main outcome measures were the Fibromyalgia Impact
Questionnaire (FIQ) and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Secondary outcome
measures included the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), the State and Trait Anxiety
Inventory (STAI), and the SF-12 Health Survey (SF-12). Data analysis was done with
repeated measures ANOVA and effect size estimation.
Results
No differences were found between groups but significant reduction in the FIQ and the PSQI
scores were observed in Ai Chi but not in stretching group, with larger effect sizes and
longer effect duration on sleep measures. BDI scores decreased in stretching but not in Ai
Chi group with small effect sizes. Trait-anxiety scores decreased in both groups also with
small effect sizes. The mental component summary of the SF-12 increased only in stretching
group with effect sizes moderate to large.
Conclusion
Although no global differences were found between groups, Ai Chi significantly improved
fibromyalgia symptomatology and sleep quality, whereas stretching only improved subjects'
psychological well-being.
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