The Japan Times - From ice baths to osteopaths: unproven therapies at the Olympics

EUR -
AED 3.820007
AFN 78.453661
ALL 98.266065
AMD 418.855353
ANG 1.881468
AOA 950.067495
ARS 1089.177597
AUD 1.661397
AWG 1.874656
AZN 1.778959
BAM 1.955125
BBD 2.107772
BDT 127.306036
BGN 1.955445
BHD 0.392015
BIF 3088.992654
BMD 1.040031
BND 1.412639
BOB 7.213509
BRL 6.18621
BSD 1.043939
BTN 90.253964
BWP 14.439014
BYN 3.41632
BYR 20384.60441
BZD 2.096976
CAD 1.496552
CDF 2958.887899
CHF 0.943937
CLF 0.037364
CLP 1030.992715
CNY 7.579535
CNH 7.584778
COP 4431.571397
CRC 525.023737
CUC 1.040031
CUP 27.560817
CVE 110.226934
CZK 25.145864
DJF 185.895803
DKK 7.459827
DOP 64.058494
DZD 140.850005
EGP 52.366802
ERN 15.600463
ETB 133.537568
FJD 2.40923
FKP 0.856556
GBP 0.845509
GEL 2.974719
GGP 0.856556
GHS 15.815538
GIP 0.856556
GMD 75.922434
GNF 9024.057179
GTQ 8.069136
GYD 218.304611
HKD 8.101866
HNL 26.577077
HRK 7.674957
HTG 136.325543
HUF 410.937046
IDR 16926.397873
ILS 3.698667
IMP 0.856556
INR 89.976708
IQD 1367.514596
IRR 43785.29838
ISK 146.103649
JEP 0.856556
JMD 163.805007
JOD 0.737692
JPY 162.709713
KES 134.528257
KGS 90.950463
KHR 4208.627531
KMF 491.522055
KPW 936.027869
KRW 1496.661555
KWD 0.320569
KYD 0.87
KZT 543.812201
LAK 22771.136248
LBP 93483.616501
LKR 311.742343
LRD 206.696632
LSL 19.287239
LTL 3.070941
LVL 0.629104
LYD 5.135227
MAD 10.416603
MDL 19.469277
MGA 4893.357185
MKD 61.558788
MMK 3377.97959
MNT 3534.024896
MOP 8.374128
MRU 41.580041
MUR 48.371921
MVR 16.02691
MWK 1810.192276
MXN 21.31668
MYR 4.622419
MZN 66.4683
NAD 19.287239
NGN 1621.32462
NIO 38.417472
NOK 11.743778
NPR 144.409518
NZD 1.839639
OMR 0.400329
PAB 1.043939
PEN 3.893818
PGK 4.250573
PHP 61.043047
PKR 291.099072
PLN 4.222681
PYG 8257.148488
QAR 3.810084
RON 4.975522
RSD 117.110626
RUB 102.963513
RWF 1464.608297
SAR 3.901242
SBD 8.813979
SCR 14.823166
SDG 625.058472
SEK 11.469788
SGD 1.411213
SHP 0.856556
SLE 23.604267
SLL 21808.926559
SOS 596.599707
SRD 36.484374
STD 21526.538517
SVC 9.134845
SYP 13522.48093
SZL 19.272345
THB 35.354288
TJS 11.425644
TMT 3.650508
TND 3.313456
TOP 2.435857
TRY 37.084676
TTD 7.091551
TWD 34.109926
TZS 2636.478428
UAH 43.84588
UGX 3841.673322
USD 1.040031
UYU 45.684663
UZS 13560.317099
VES 57.920838
VND 26141.175094
VUV 123.474549
WST 2.912946
XAF 655.736854
XAG 0.03405
XAU 0.000378
XCD 2.810735
XDR 0.80433
XOF 655.730551
XPF 119.331742
YER 259.020115
ZAR 19.310726
ZMK 9361.526229
ZMW 29.099951
ZWL 334.889505
  • RBGPF

    61.2800

    61.28

    +100%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    7.42

    +2.02%

  • RELX

    -0.2900

    49.26

    -0.59%

  • SCS

    -0.2200

    11.58

    -1.9%

  • NGG

    -1.5400

    60.05

    -2.56%

  • GSK

    -0.3500

    33.43

    -1.05%

  • RIO

    -0.6100

    61.12

    -1%

  • BP

    -0.3900

    31.13

    -1.25%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.49

    -0.26%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    23.96

    -0.17%

  • BTI

    -0.1600

    36.57

    -0.44%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    8.38

    -2.03%

  • BCC

    -1.2000

    127.92

    -0.94%

  • BCE

    -0.2400

    23.15

    -1.04%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.53

    -0.32%

  • AZN

    0.2400

    68.2

    +0.35%

From ice baths to osteopaths: unproven therapies at the Olympics
From ice baths to osteopaths: unproven therapies at the Olympics / Photo: Emmanuel Dunand - AFP/File

From ice baths to osteopaths: unproven therapies at the Olympics

The Paris Olympics have been a showcase not only for athletic prowess but also for therapies such as ice baths and osteopathy which have little scientifically proven medical value, according to experts.

Text size:

The Olympics have long been a fertile ground for questionable medical treatments, as athletes seek out every way possible to improve their performance and tamp down their pain.

"In sport there is a lot of propaganda for all kinds of 'alternative medicine' -- there is a lot of demand from athletes," French neurologist and pain specialist Didier Bouhassira told AFP.

At the Rio Games eight years ago, cupping was the latest pseudoscientific fad. Though praised at the time by athletes such as US Olympic swimming great Michael Phelps, there is little scientific evidence that applying heated cups to the skin has any more benefit than a placebo.

For this year's Games, which kicked off in Paris on Friday, ice has been all the rage.

Cryotherapy -- which includes cold-water swimming, ice baths and more advanced cooling chambers -- is touted to help athletes recover after vigorous exercise.

- The new ice age -

According to a recent editorial published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, the federations taking part in the Paris Games together requested more than 16,000 tons of ice -- at a cost of 2.5 million euros ($2.7 million).

No vendor was able to supply such a massive amount of ice, so the Olympics will have to make do with 650 tons, the editorial said. That is still 10 times more than was required at the Tokyo Games only three years ago.

The editorial's authors criticised the routine use of cryotherapy for athletes between training sessions.

While ice baths can treat some conditions, such as heat stroke, athletes often use it "to obtain benefits which are not evidence-based," they wrote.

"Ice could have the opposite effect to that expected such as delayed tissue regeneration or impaired recovery."

The authors also stressed the environmental impact of producing, transporting and storing such vast amounts of ice.

- 'Long way from science' -

Another alternative medicine sought out by athletes -- osteopathy -- is no newcomer to the Olympics.

Osteopaths are on the staff of federations and integrated into the teams at the official Olympic clinic which monitors athletes daily.

But osteopathy, which promises to restore health through manipulations of the body, has little scientific basis and its effectiveness remains hotly contested.

Studies with rigorous methodology have found that broad swathes of the discipline -- such as "cranial" or "visceral" osteopathy -- simply have no effect.

Other osteopathic manipulations, which hew closer to those done by physios, appear to have no particular advantage over conventional, evidence-based physiotherapy.

A randomised clinical trial published in JAMA Internal Medicine in 2021 compared the effect of osteopathic manipulations with "sham" treatments such as light touching in 400 patients with back pain.

The difference between the two was "likely not clinically meaningful", the study said.

Osteopaths offer athletes a feeling of "well being without curative properties", said Pascale Mathieu, president of France's council of physiotherapists.

Mathieu emphasised she was not too worried about osteopathy being given a showcase at the Olympics, where routine care is often a mix of physiotherapy and osteopathy.

"What I'm really fighting for is to prevent osteopathy from entering hospitals," she said.

Some companies have also been accused of using the Olympics to sell products of dubious medical value.

French pharmaceutical giant Sanofi came under criticism for promoting a "pain-relieving" patch called Initiv in the run-up to the Games.

Advertised with the support of athletes such as French Olympian Kevin Mayer, Sanofi says the patch has particles which reflect infrared energy emitted by the body towards a particular area to relieve pain.

Sanofi told AFP that a clinical trial of the patch had been "received favourably by the scientific community".

But pain specialist Didier Bouhassira was not convinced.

"A product is being touted as a miracle, but it's pure PR and a long way from science," he said.

H.Takahashi--JT