Rock-Hardened Muscle?
Rheumatoid Arthritis, huh? Humdinger for sure.
It's often overlooked by the medical community, at least in terms of their symptom-based treatment (yet very important to realize) that RA is not a joint problem; it is an immune system problem. In any autoimmune disease, the immune system has become imbalanced. Two types of leukocytes (a type of white blood cell), known as TH-1 and TH-2 should remain in balance; if that balance is disrupted and one becomes excessive, bad things happen. The body starts identifying "self" as "non-self" and it starts attacking its own tissues. This could be very specific tissues, like just the joints (RA, AS) or just the thyroid gland (Hashimoto's or Grave's), etc, or it could be global manifestations (like Systemic Lupus). In truth, we are realizing more and more as time goes on that even the specific manifestations are actually a global problem (ppl with 1 autoimmune disorder are very likely to develop others). In these cases, the immune system is the culprint - the joints are simply the victim.
Fascial work (MFR/ART, etc) are good for symptom relief, for sure. I have a patient with RA and massage helps her greatly. Cortisone is good to control the inflammation, but it causes a HUGE host of problems that actually end up doing more harm than good long-term. The weight gain is usually irreversible, and it compromises the integrity of the tissues, leading to things like "leaky gut", which was probably one of the greatest contributing factors to their development of RA in the first place!
These people really need to get in to see someone who is either:
1) a MD/DO who practice Complementary Medicine, or
2) a DC who practices Functional Medicine. DC Diplomates of Internal Medicine are good, too, but Functional Medicine is more clinical and less academic (i.e. in the trenches versus theoretical exercise and trivia).
Acupuncturists can be of good help, too - it's hit and miss. I've seen the same individual respond differently to 2 separate treatments given the same way by the same acupuncturist. So as with anything, it depends.
Can massage therapy help RA? It will help with the symptoms of pain and post-inflammation. It will definitely help flush inflammatory chemicals so that the process heals quicker. Will massage therapy affect the central integrated state of the CNS? Yes, but probably not enough to effect enough of a change in the RA mechanism.
There is a protocol that is used to determine someone's TH-1/TH-2 leukocyte dominance without HAVING to run the bloodwork (as the lab testing is in its infancy right now, being developed and worked out as we speak). It has no peer-reviewed research behind it (but then, neither do more than half of conventional medical protocols either
) but it seems to work very well clinically at identifying the problem and providing relief that gets to the cause. It's cool, because the person's immune system can be tipped back into balance using some super-high-quality nutritional supplements. Powerful stuff, very cool. There IS hope for these people
Hugs,
~Jyoti