Posted on 08/11/2016 11:22:20 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Those dark red, spots dotting Olympians shoulders and backs are not cigar burns. Theyre not perfectly circular hickeys either.
Viewers watching the Olympics this weekend may have spotted the pepperoni-like bruises on athletes and wondered: What is that?
Olympians at Rio have taken to cupping an ancient therapy that have mostly been used in Middle Eastern and Asian countries, especially China.
The therapy consists of having round glass suction cups that are warmed, then placed on sore parts of the body. The placement of the glass cup creates a partial vacuum, which is believed to stimulate muscles and blood flow, while relieving pain.
Michael Phelps, US gymnast Alex Naddour and Belarus swimmer Pavel Sankovich have all posted pictures of their polka dotted limbs and backs.
Sankovich wrote earlier this summer on his Instagram account: Cupping is a great recovery tool, with a photo of his thighs covered in suction cups. Former Olympic swimmer Natalie Coughlin has also previously posted pictures of herself going through a cupping therapy.
Phelps showed snippets of his cupping therapy on his Instagram as well as his Under Armour commercial.
Its not the first time cupping has made the rounds. Celebrities like Jennifer Aniston, Gwyneth Paltrow and Jessica Simpson have all been spotted with the marks in previous years.
Cupping is not new, its ancient
The practice of cupping has been mentioned in ancient Greek and Egyptian texts.
In traditional Chinese medicine, cupping dates back at least 2,000 years, according to a 2012 analysis published in the journal PLOS One. It is believed to restore the flow of qi the life force.
In recent years, cupping therapy has been used for people suffering all sorts of ailments including shingles, facial paralysis, cough and difficulty breathing and acne. But cupping is most commonly used to treat pain, according to the analysis.
One small study on cupping found that the cupping marks generally fade after two to four days.
What does the evidence say?
In previous studies, cupping has been used for treating cancer pain and lower back pain. In both of the randomized clinical trials, groups that received the cupping therapy reported more favorable effects in pain relief.
But this is just two trials with small sample sizes, so the researchers wrote in 2011 that its hard to draw firm conclusions based on limited data, in a review published in Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine.
Most published studies, however, focus on wet cupping, which is a form of medicinal bleeding. In this process, the skin is cut and the blood is pooled into the suction cup.
Based on social media photos, the athletes have opted for the non-bleeding therapy, which is known as dry cupping.
So far, the repeated effect of cupping therapy over time is not known, but its generally believed to be safe, according to research published in 2012.
Olympians like fads, too
Every Olympics seems to have trendy items meant to help athletes, from high-tech swimsuits to the bright kinesio tape that made a scene in the London 2012 games. The tape appears to be back in Rio.
Unlike athletic tape, kinesio tape is thin and pliable, and meant to keep injured joints from bending to prevent further injury. The tape is used to prevent excessive protraction injuries, for example, shoulder problems from activities including playing tennis.
But the scientific evidence on kinesio tape is thin, according to a review published in the journal The Physician and Sportsmedicine. Studies showed that it improved pain and range of motion shortly after the injury, but the tape didnt make a difference in the long run.
Nothing actually works except FDA approved pharmaceuticals.
Understand?
NOTHING.
Don’t forget it.
There was an article not long ago about a person in china who overdid it with the ‘cupping’ and ended up with horrible disfigurement. The procedure breaks cappilaries in the skin and can cause necrosis.
It’s worked for me! I have a kit to do it to myself, although it’s less effective then having a pro do it.
I hear that cupping also works in sports like football and baseball where high speed projectiles can end up hitting the wrong spots.
For Southerners, it’s about the same as giving yourself a hickey. The process and end result are about the same.
I once had a Chinese therapist do this on me during a massage...if memory serves it took weeks for the marks to fade. I did not notice any extra benefit from it...except that now I am wise enough to say "no thank you" next time...
Cupping? Me and a beautiful woman’s breast...
This’ll get nuked...
Jack Hammer’s been doing this for years - I swear by it.
Great stuff.
Guess they found a new use for the penis pump.
I would argue that although it is possible to randomize the trial participants, it is impossible to conduct a blinded trial. And a blinded trial would be the *only* way to get a true determination of whether this treatment has any therapeutic effect.
When a study intervention cannot be blinded (to both participants and researchers), then the placebo effect becomes very strong. Study participants who know they are receiving the "treatment" and who expect positive benefits from it report that they feel better afterwards, even when they feel no such benefit.
I would say that any relief of muscle pains that the athletes experience is not due to the cupping, but to being distracted from the pain by the sensation of the suction. They could experience distraction from pain by any number of methods. Personally, I would not choose a method that causes sufficient subepidermal capillary breakage to leave visible marks that last a couple days.
I watched a video of Michael Phelps having it done. I think he had 4 or 5 cups on his left shoulder blade and his back. It was really weird looking.
Isn’t Cupping pretty much what Jackie Chan did in the remake of the Karate Kid in the recent Chinese version when Jaden Smith was attacked by the kid bullies?
And yes, I did actually like that version of the movie . . .
Is it like scissoring?
“It is believed to restore the flow of qi the life force.”
Done. It’s crap. Any time you hear about Ancient Chinese Medicine talking about “qi” or “balance” or “energy”, just put it into the “crap” column. Same with India and their seven chakras or whatever those things are.
“...It’s just that demon life that’s got you in Feng shui...”
Apologies to the Rolling Stones.
Pepperoni. It’s the new baloney.
Our pharma-friendly medical practitioners only believe in safe pain relievers, such as Oxycontin. These old cures are too inexpensive and non-addictive.
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