Which of the following terms is defined as a relaxation technique that involves contracting and relaxing muscle groups throughout the body?

Progressive muscle relaxation is a way for children to learn to feel the difference between tense and relaxed muscles and to use this knowledge to cope with abdominal pain.

From: Integrative Medicine (Third Edition), 2012

Interventions for individuals with movement limitations

Rolando T. Lazaro PT, PhD, DPT, in Umphred's Neurological Rehabilitation, 2020

Progressive muscle relaxation.

Progressive muscle relaxation is practiced during both meditation and treatment approaches such as Feldenkrais.268,280,281 These methods of relaxation tend to trigger parasympathetic reactions, which in turn slow down heart rate and blood pressure and trigger slow, deep breathing (seeChapters 16 and39). The Alexander technique has also been shown to cause relaxation while simultaneously increasing postural tone.282

Treatment considerations using olfactory, gustatory, auditory, and visual systems. Boxes 8.2 to 8.5 present a summary of treatment considerations using the olfactory, gustatory, auditory and visual systems.

Progressive muscle relaxation

Peter A. Mackereth, Lynne Tomlinson, in Integrative Hypnotherapy, 2010

INTRODUCTION

Numerous benefits have been claimed for relaxation training for a variety of health problems associated with stress and anxiety, with a body of research work to its credit (Freeman 2001); this will be reviewed in more detail later in this chapter. Edmund Jacobson, the originator of the progressive muscle relaxation training, had observed in 1905 that deeply relaxed students demonstrated no obvious startle response to sudden noise; this became his life work (Jacobson 1977). He developed a lengthy and meticulous technique, which focused on getting in touch with musculature and learning to control the tension levels. Jacobson's method was designed so that the practitioner would eventually be able to automatically and unconsciously monitor and release unwanted tension. The process has since been adapted and shortened by others, most notably Joseph Wolpe, and has become known as the abbreviated progressive muscle relaxation training. Included in this adaptation is the tension–release cycle (e.g. make a tight fist and then release) combined with a focus on breathing. This variation is part of Wolpe's framework called systematic desensitization, aimed at getting in touch with the individual's tension and the body's response, and then letting it go in a controlled manner. Freeman (2001) suggests that PMR and other muscle-based relaxation variations convey health benefits in three ways:

1.

Utilizing the effects of PMR to manipulate autonomic responses

2.

Increases or activates the production of opiates

3.

Promotes optimal immune function.

Autonomic responses determine whether the body needs to engage in a ‘fight-or-flight’ or ‘rest-and-digest’ scenario or to a state somewhere between these two extremes. The sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system (ANS), associated with ‘flight-or-fight’ responses, mobilizes the body in emergency and stressful circumstances. Many of these responses are not immediately apparent to our consciousness. Physically, blood flow is redirected away from the digestive process to the smooth muscle, heart rate and blood pressure increase, with these processes triggered by the increase of circulating catecholamines, which include adrenaline and noradrenaline (Hucklebridge & Clow 2002). Associated with the stress response is the release of cortisol, which mobilizes energy reserves, increases sensitivity of tissues to neurotransmitters and inhibits the immune and inflammatory response. Freeman (2001) argues that PMR techniques blunt sympathetic arousal by training the individual to reduce oxygen requirements, achieved by the repetitive release of muscle tension combined with slowing of respirations. This makes it a useful therapeutic intervention for panic, phobias and anxiety states.

Important to well-being, endogenous opioids, such as enkephalins, dynorphins, endomorphins and β-endorphin, have been found to have a variety of effects, including analgesic, anti-inflammatory and bronchodilation (Jessop 2002). These compounds and their receptor sites have been located within immune tissues (Stephanou et al 1990). It has been argued that opioids play an important part in modulating stress responses. It has been noted that opioid production is increased in adults who exercise regularly (Freeman 2001) and is reduced in adults with enduring health problems such as chronic fatigue syndrome (Conti et al 1998). In a laboratory experiment (n = 32) to determine the role of endogenous opioids in the effects of PMR training, McCubben et al (1996) found that PMR significantly reduced diastolic pressure, but when an opioid blockade was administered, it antagonized the PMR training. Hypnotherapists could utilize the potential responses of reduced anxiety and pain relief in the development of anchors and post-hypnotic suggestions, with an intention to help build a patient's resources (Box 6.1).

Over three decades, Herbert Benson and colleagues (1984) have investigated the psychological and physiological effects associated with the relaxation response, elicited from PMR, meditation, yoga and physical exercise routines, many of which appear to be the opposite of the stress response. Stefano et al (1996: 3) have acknowledged that repetition is crucial to the relaxation response, but surmise that ‘trust or belief in expected outcomes’ can help to regulate immunological function via cognitive and neurological processes. This sense of improved well-being associated with the relaxation response has been labelled ‘remembered wellness’, which Benson (1996) has ascribed to memories of nurturance and maternal attachment. Lazar et al (2000) have investigated the relaxation response to meditation with functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and mapped areas of the brain, which are responsive to opioids. Stefano et al (1996) suggests that this work demonstrates the mind–body wiring that could modulate the relationship between cognitive and physiological processes. In this review of neural processes and the relaxation response, Stefano and colleagues (1996) note that increased circulatory levels of opioids improve mood and sense of well-being, and refer to earlier work on enkephalins, which they found to have the additional benefit of stimulating immune cells. Aside from effects of opioids on heart rate, blood pressure, respiration, immune cells and mood, these compounds have also been found to stimulate antibacterial peptides in human studies (Tasiemski et al 2000). This information can provide a wealth of ideas for hypnotherapists using PMR and tailored suggestions, to enable patients to connect with feelings of being nurtured and supported.

The PMR method has a strong record of clinical efficacy and is an acknowledged standard strategy for a number of somatic states, including anxiety and stress, and features as part of clinical training in psychology (Pawlow & Jones 2002, Turner et al 1992). It is recommended that patients receive individual live instruction; indeed Lehrer and Woolfolf (1994) have argued that one-to-one training is crucial to effective training as well as any evaluative research. Relaxation techniques are increasingly being used as a non-pharmacological intervention by nurses, occupational therapists and medical practitioners in a variety of healthcare settings. DeMarco-Sinatra (2000), a nurse practitioner in the USA, believes that teaching relaxation techniques can be an appropriate role for nurses in both in-patient and out-patient settings. He argues that the activity supports patient autonomy and is cost-effective as a method of health promotion. We argue here that PMR and other forms of relaxation training are valuable additions to the hypnotherapy toolbox. Aside from being part of standard hypnotherapy induction training, PMR skills need to be updated and developed in ongoing training and supervision.

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Pain Management : Principles of Therapist’s Interventions

Terri M. Skirven OTR/L, CHT, in Rehabilitation of the Hand and Upper Extremity, 2021

Relaxation Training

It is common for patients with pain, especially those with chronic pain, to experience stress along with comorbid anxiety, anger, and depression.19 These can predate the pain but nonetheless are capable of heightening the pain experience. Conversely affective disorders can also emerge after pain events, especially when pain is prolonged.19 Physiological stress responses occur in reaction to fear or perceived threats to safety.22 Epinephrine, norepinephrine, and cortisol are released, and when this happens repeatedly or when levels remain elevated for prolonged periods, the body develops a sensitized physiological stress response, which is easily triggered. This leads to prolonged elevation of cortisol, systemic inflammation, and increased pain. The stress–cortisol–pain cycle becomes self-perpetuating. The ability to break the cycle and invoke a relaxation response may help to reduce both stress and pain. Two widely used relaxation techniques are diaphragmatic breathing and progressive muscle relaxation. Diaphragmatic breathing trains patients to breathe slowly and deeply, engaging the diaphragm in abdominal excursion, the diaphragm in abdominal excursion rather than shallow, rapid chest breathing, which uses smaller accessory muscles. Diaphragmatic breathing has been demonstrated to impact emotions by decreasing negative cognitions and has also been shown to decrease cortisol levels and thus directly impacts the stress cycle.23

Progressive muscle relaxation is a whole-body relaxation technique in which participants alternately tense and relax muscle groups and regions of the body. It is thought that over time, with prolonged states of stress, the body “learns” to be tense. This state of muscle tension is often so persistent that it becomes “normal.” Through progressive muscle relaxation exercise, patients are able to feel the difference between tense and relaxed states, and it is thought that over time, muscle relaxation can be relearned.20

Both diaphragmatic breathing and progressive muscle relaxation fall within the scope of therapist’s practice expertise and can be performed in the clinic and issued as part of a home exercise program. Numerous online resources can be found to assist patients with home practice of these techniques. It is always prudent for therapists to curate a list of reliable digital and online resources to guide patients in their independent practice of these techniques at home.

Activity Modification and Pacing

Another important and helpful technique when implementing CBT strategies is the concept of activity modification and pacing. Therapists often encounter pain patients who are at either extreme of the activity spectrum. At one extreme, patients are afraid to move and are not engaging in much activity at all. At the other extreme, patients try to do everything, and in the course of doing so, they exacerbate pain symptoms and at times even risk disrupting healing tissue. Activity modification and pacing techniques are helpful skills for patients to learn regardless of where they fall on the activity spectrum and across many diagnoses regardless of the mechanism of pain generation.

Integrative Approaches to Pain Management

Delia Chiaramonte, ... Brian Morrison, in Practical Management of Pain (Fifth Edition), 2014

Progressive Muscle Relaxation

Progressive muscle relaxation is a technique commonly used for eliciting the relaxation response and relieving muscular tension. It is easy to learn and is accessible even to people who may not be familiar with or interested in meditation. It involves sequentially relaxing various muscle groups, often starting at the head and moving down the body to the feet. Participants may tense a muscle before relaxing it (for example, clenching the jaw and then releasing it) or simply bring their attention to a muscle group and intentionally relax it. A sample progressive muscle relaxation script is provided in Appendix A.

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Complementary therapies in supportive oncology

Edzard K. Ernst, in Supportive Oncology, 2011

Background

Progressive muscle relaxation is one of the most commonly used relaxation techniques. It is based on the notion that it is impossible to be tense in any part of the body in which the muscles are completely relaxed. In addition, tension in involuntary muscles can be reduced if the associated skeletal muscles are relaxed. This technique is taught by tensing a muscle before relaxing it. Passive muscle relaxation involves the release of tension while focusing on muscle groups. Progressive muscle relaxation and other relaxation techniques generate a relaxation response, resulting in normalizing of the blood supply to the muscles, decreasing oxygen consumption, heart rate, respiration, and skeletal muscle activity and increasing skin resistance and alpha brain waves.

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Relaxation Techniques (Progressive Muscle Relaxation)

Mitchell Batavia PhD, PT, in Contraindications in Physical Rehabilitation, 2006

OVERVIEW.

Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) is a general method of relaxation by consciously contracting and then relaxing groups of muscles. The technique was originally developed by Jacobson, a Chicago physician, and has been used to reduce stress, reduce pain, and promote health.1

SUMMARY: CONTRAINDICATIONS AND PRECAUTIONS.

Two sources cited a total of seven concerns for relaxation techniques in the Jacobson tradition. Snyder, a nurse, cited six concerns, whereas Bernstein (PhD) cited one. About 70% of the concerns were procedural and related to eliciting hypotensive responses or potentiating medication effects. Other concerns relate to cardiac patients (performing isometric contractions) and chronic pain patients (focusing too much on pain).

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Intervention applications

In Mosby's Field Guide to Occupational Therapy for Physical Dysfunction, 2013

Relaxation

Progressive muscle relaxation in conjunction with breathing exercises can be effective in decreasing anxiety and controlling shortness of breath. One technique involves tensing muscle groups while slowly inhaling and then relaxing the muscle groups when exhaling twice as slowly through pursed lips. It is helpful to teach the patient a sequence of muscle groups to tense and relax. One common sequence involves tensing and relaxing first the face; followed by the face and the neck; then the face, neck, and shoulders; and so on, down the body to the toes. A calm, quiet, and comfortable environment is important for the novice in learning any relaxation technique. Biofeedback in conjunction with relaxation therapy promotes a more timely mastery of relaxation skills.

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Recurring Abdominal Pain in Pediatrics

Joy A. Weydert MD, in Integrative Medicine (Fourth Edition), 2018

Progressive Muscle Relaxation and Breathing Exercises

Both progressive muscle relaxation and breathing exercises, used alone or in combination, are forms of self-regulation that help decrease sympathetic arousal to promote comfort. Progressive muscle relaxation is a way for children to learn to feel the difference between tense and relaxed muscles, and to use this knowledge to cope with abdominal pain. Progressive relaxation reduces anxiety associated with pain by demonstrating the mind-body phenomenon and patient capacity for self-regulation. The benefits of these approaches are that they are easily taught, particularly to school-age children, and can be used anywhere. Scripts can be given to parents to use, or a tape can be made or purchased for home use (see Chapters 94 and 95Chapter 94Chapter 95).

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Recurring Abdominal Pain in Pediatrics

Joy A. Weydert MD, in Integrative Medicine (Third Edition), 2012

Progressive Muscle Relaxation and Breathing Exercises

Both progressive muscle relaxation and breathing exercises, used alone or together, are forms of self-regulation that help decrease sympathetic arousal to promote comfort. Progressive muscle relaxation is a way for children to learn to feel the difference between tense and relaxed muscles and to use this knowledge to cope with abdominal pain. Progressive relaxation reduces anxiety associated with pain by demonstrating the mind-body phenomenon and patients' capacity for self-regulation. The benefits of these approaches are that they are easily taught, especially to school-age children, and they can be used anywhere. Scripts can be given to parents to use, or a tape can be made or purchased for home use (see Chapter 92, Self-Hypnosis Techniques and Chapter 93, Relaxation Techniques).

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Relaxation techniques

Christine Irnich, in Myofascial Trigger Points, 2013

24.2.2 Jacobsen's progressive muscle relaxation

Definition

Jacobsen's progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) (Jacobsen 1938) is a procedure for achieving a condition of deep relaxation of the whole body through the voluntary and conscious tensing and relaxing of specific muscle groups. The individual muscle parts are initially tensed in a specific order, the muscle tension is held for a brief time and then released. The main aim is the deliberate, continuous reduction in tension in the individual muscle groups of the locomotor apparatus.

Physiological principles

The principle of PMR is based on relaxation of the affected region after strong tensing of the muscles. Repeated use leads to a ‘cultivation of muscle sense’; the patient consciously learns to be sensitive to the body and perceive the tiniest tension in order to know where to relax.

Theoretical basis

The physiologist Edmund Jacobsen worked on the assumption that a condition of rest or relaxation can most reliably be established by a reduction in neuromuscular tension and that inversely activity in the CNS can be reduced through a reduction in muscle tension (the premise of reciprocity). He began to gather empirical evidence of this interplay between the central nervous, mental processes and peripheral muscle changes in a series of studies in 1920. Jacobsen investigated the startle reaction after a sudden loud noise and ascertained that people who have learned to relax their muscles are not startled.

The level of muscle tension also affects the extent of the reflex. Jacobsen also ascertained that mental visualisation, especially if associated with exercise, led to slight but measurable muscular activity. For example, he showed that imagining specific arm movements was associated with an increase in EMG activity of the biceps muscles.

Appropriate eye movements could also be recorded by visualising images (e.g. following the zigzag movements of a rabbit). Empirical evidence for the effect of the power of the imagination on the muscles or on various body functions was provided in a series of later investigations.

Indications

Muscle tension, stress, mental unrest, pain, migraine, asthma, sleep disorders and cardiovascular symptoms are all indicated.

Contraindications

Acute and/or decompensated diseases or conditions are contraindicated.

Procedure

The procedure builds on the principle of tension (for 1–2 min) and then relaxation (for 3–4 min) for each muscle group. The tension phase does not depend on contracting the muscle as far as possible but on learning to perceive the most subtle tension in individual muscle groups. The patient should concentrate on the relevant sensations in the tension and relaxation phases. They thus learn to distinguish ever weaker contractions and even to break down minimal tension. All the muscle groups of the locomotor apparatus from the head to the toes are successively tensed and then relaxed.

Jacobsen described several individual training units for seven practice areas in the following series:

arm exercises (for upper arm, forearm and finger muscles),

leg exercises (for hip flexors, buttock, thigh, lower leg, calf and toe muscles),

trunk exercises (for abdomen, back, rib, diaphragm, chest and shoulder muscles),

neck exercises (for neck muscles),

exercises of the eye region (for forehead, face and eye muscles),

visualisation exercises (perception of even weak contractions of the eye muscles),

exercises for the tools of speech (for muscles of mastication, floor of the mouth, face and tongue).

The individual exercises can be carried out either seated or lying down. Here are three examples of part-exercises to illustrate the method.

Arm exercise: the patient is lying down with eyes closed. The lift the forearm at a right angle to the bed and close the fist (1–2 min). Meanwhile they note the feeling of tension in the whole arm. They then let the arm fall and concentrate on loosening the arm (3–4 min). The exercise is repeated after a rest.

Neck exercise: in a seated position, the head is first pressed back and then forward against external resistance. The head is finally pressed to the left and then to the right. Between these four tension phases are relaxation phases.

Visualisation exercise: to perceive even weak contractions of the eye muscles the patient is seated or lying down with eyes closed and initially imagines, e.g., a train moving past for about 1 min. This causes horizontal eye movements. After a pause the patient imagines, for example, looking to the top of a tree. This causes vertical eye movements. Finally, complex eye movements can be caused by, e.g., imagining a rabbit zigzaging while running away. The exercise is repeated after a rest (with the eyes open).

According to the original version of PMR, daily exercise times of an hour and over 50 training sessions (about three muscle groups per session) were envisaged. That means that it could take 3–6 months before the patient has mastered the relaxation technique.

After mastering the basic exercises, the so-called ‘differentiated relaxation’ could be added. This includes implementing PMR in everyday life (e.g. when reading and writing at work or when driving a car). The necessary movements should be carried out economically and any muscle groups not required should remain as relaxed as possible. Jacobsen suggested inducing relaxation in stages for learning differentiated relaxation, for example from lying down to seated to simple seated tasks.

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Which of the following terms is defined as a relaxation technique that involves contracting and relaxing muscle groups throughout the body quizlet?

A relaxation technique involving contracting and relaxing muscle groups throughout the body; also called progressive relaxation or Jacobsonian relaxation.

Which of the following terms is defined as a relaxation technique that involves a sensation of heaviness warmth and tingling in the limbs?

A relaxation technique that involves a sensation of heaviness, warmth, and tingling in the limbs is called. autogenic training.

Which of the following relaxation techniques involves learning to tense and relax all of the major muscle groups of the body?

Progressive muscle relaxation. In this relaxation technique, you focus on slowly tensing and then relaxing each muscle group. This can help you focus on the difference between muscle tension and relaxation.

Which stress management technique involves contracting and then relaxing muscle groups in the body in succession?

Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) is a stress-management mindfulness technique. PMR can help relieve the physical symptoms of stress and anxiety, such as tight, aching muscles, by systematically tensing and releasing certain muscle groups in your body.