Enhancing the efficacy of traditional Mongolian alcohol-spraying bone-setting therapy for surgical neck fractures of the humerus: the effects and mechanisms of muscular origin-insertion point massage therapy
Changjiang Xie, Mengte Du, Xin Wang, Huqitu Xi, Tianhu Wei

TL;DR
Combining Mongolian bone-setting therapy with muscle massage improves shoulder fracture recovery by reducing inflammation and improving blood flow.
Contribution
Demonstrates that adding muscle massage to traditional therapy enhances healing in humeral surgical neck fractures.
Findings
The experimental group had significantly better shoulder function scores from four weeks post-treatment.
Lower sICAM-1 and sVCAM-1 levels suggest reduced inflammation in the experimental group.
Improved hemorheological parameters indicate enhanced microcirculation in the experimental group.
Abstract
Humeral surgical neck fractures (HSNF) are among the most common shoulder fractures, yet their treatment outcomes remain variable. Clinical observations suggest that combining traditional Mongolian alcohol-spraying bone-setting therapy with muscular origin-insertion point massage may accelerate fracture healing; however, the therapeutic efficacy and underlying mechanisms require further validation. A total of patients with HSNF were randomly allocated into two groups. The control group received Mongolian alcohol-spraying bone-setting therapy, while the experimental group received the same treatment plus muscular origin-insertion point massage. Clinical outcomes were assessed using the Constant-Murley and Neer shoulder function scores at multiple time points. To explore potential mechanisms, serum levels of soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (sICAM-1), soluble vascular cell…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAcupuncture Treatment Research Studies · Surgical Sutures and Adhesives · Bone fractures and treatments
