Hypnosis ‘eases cancer op pain’

July 11, 2010 in Health, Hypnotherapy by Noel

Breast cancer patients need less anaes­thetic during oper­ations if they have been relaxed by hypnosis beforehand, US research suggests.

Patients in the study of 200 women by the Mount Sinai School of Medicine also reported less pain afterwards.

Breast cancer surgery patients often suffer severe side-​​effects such as pain, nausea and fatigue during and after their operations.

UK experts said more research was needed to prove hypnosis worked.

The side-​​effects from breast cancer surgery can sometimes mean a longer stay in hospital, extra drugs, or even a return to a hospital ward when patients should be recovering at home.

The Journal of the National Cancer Institute paper is just the latest to conclude hypnosis can help with operations.

Dr Guy Mont­gomery, who led the research, recruited 200 women to receive either 15 minutes of hypnosis or just a con­ver­sation with a psy­cho­logist before their surgery.

The women undergoing hypnosis were given sug­gestions for relaxation and pleasant mental images, and instructions on how to use hypnosis themselves.

Patients who had received hypnosis needed less anaes­thetic than the others, and reported less pain, nausea, fatigue and emo­tional distress after the operation.

Money saving

The researchers said this was not just better for the patients, but it added up to cash savings for the hospital, as oper­ations took less time on the hyp­notised patients, and less was spent on med­ication and read­mission of patients.

Dr David Spiegel, from Stanford Uni­versity School of Medicine, wrote in the journal: “You have to pay attention to pain for it to hurt, and it is entirely possible to sub­stan­tially alter pain per­ception during surgical pro­cedures by inducing hypnotic relaxation, trans­forming per­ception in parts of the body, or dir­ecting attention elsewhere.

The key concept is that this psy­cho­logical pro­cedure actually changes pain experience as much as many analgesic med­ic­ations and far more than placebos.”

Dr Sarah Cant, from Break­through Breast Cancer, said: “This is an inter­esting study and anything that can help reduce the side-​​effects of breast surgery for breast cancer patients is to be welcomed.

However, further, larger studies are needed before we can come to any firm con­clusions about the benefits of hypnosis prior to breast surgery.

Anyone interested in using hypnosis should discuss this with their breast care team first and ensure that they are using an appro­priately trained and exper­ienced hypnotherapist.”

Related Articles

This article was ori­ginally pub­lished on www.HypnotherapyClinic.info by Con­sultant Clinical Hyp­no­therapist & Pys­cho­therapist Noel Bradford

As a pro­fes­sional therapist Noel help people with everything that you would expect including giving up smoking, con­trolling their weight, dealing with fears and phobias. However his services go far beyond this and encompass things that affect everyone at some time in their life, such as depression, anxiety, panic attacks, stress, and low self esteem.

He  also has detailed spe­cialist training in several areas including but not limitted to Irrittable Bowel Syndrome and Pyscho­sexual matters that affect men such as Errectile Dys­function and Pre­mature Ejac­u­lation as well as those affecting women such as Hyper Desire Disorder, Vaginisums, and Dys­pareunia.

Ori­ginally posted 2010-​​01-​​07 13:44:00.

pixelstats trackingpixel
Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • TwitThis
  • Blogosphere News
  • HealthRanker
  • MySpace
  • Ping.fm
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • LinkedIn