AI Article Synopsis

  • Two groups of adult psychiatric patients with anxiety neurosis were compared on their responses to two training methods for deep muscle relaxation: EMG feedback and modified Jacobson Progressive Relaxation.
  • The frontalis muscle was targeted for feedback and tension measurements, as it reflects overall muscle tension in anxious patients.
  • Both methods led to significant reductions in muscle tension, but EMG feedback proved more effective, resulting in larger decreases in muscle activity and greater relief of anxiety symptoms for more patients.

Article Abstract

Two similar groups of adult psychiatric patients carrying the diagnosis of anxiety neurosis were compared in their response to different methods of training in deep muscle relaxation. One group received EMG feedback and the other a modification of the Jacobson Progressive Relaxation method. The frontalis muscle was chosen as the target for feedback training and for the measurement of tension reduction in both groups, for the reason that this muscle has been shown to reflect the general muscle tension level in anxious patients. Training was carried out under controlled laboratory conditions, and objective muscle tension levels were obtained. Overall changes in the status of the anxiety symptoms, as determined by global ratings from patients and from primary therapists, were also compared in the two groups at the end of training. The results of the study indicated that both EMG feedback and the progressive muscle relaxation training produced significant reductions in frontalis tension levels. However, EMG feedback was found to be generally superior in producing larger reductions in muscle activity, with a concomitant relief in anxiety symptoms, for a greater number of the patients.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjp.127.5.470DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

emg feedback
16
muscle relaxation
12
feedback progressive
8
muscle
8
progressive muscle
8
relaxation training
8
anxiety neurosis
8
muscle tension
8
tension levels
8
anxiety symptoms
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!