Benefits from aromatherapy tough to prove
12/25/2006
By: Judy Foreman
Aromatherapy --
the use of plant oils to improve well-being --
sounds lovely, doesn't it? How wonderful if a whiff
of lavender could make you feel drowsy, or a little
dab of rosemary oil could relieve muscle pain.
There's certainly
a plausible biological basis for the idea that
smells can have direct effects on the body. On the
yucky side, for instance, nothing makes me nauseated
more quickly than the odor of those pine tree-shaped
"air fresheners" that taxi drivers hang in their
cabs. On the positive side, for me, the scent of a
fresh Christmas tree always evokes warm memories of
childhood; or the smell of cookies baking in the
oven can help sell a house.
But there's little
solid science behind many of the claims of medical
benefit from aromatherapy, which usually means
soothing the body through smells, but can also mean
rubbing plant oils on the skin.
"There have been
some pretty wild claims" about the effects of
aromatherapy, said Dr. Charles J. Wysocki , a
behavioral neuroscientist at the Monell Chemical
Senses Center, a corporate-sponsored research
institute in Philadelphia, who has spent more than
30 years studying smell.
It is precisely
this lack of data that makes aromatherapy so
important to study, said Ohio State University
health psychologist Janice Kiecolt-Glaser. She is
currently analyzing her results from a
government-funded study in which she exposed one
group to lavender, "which is supposed to be a
relaxant," she said, another to lemon, "which is
supposed to be stimulating or uplifting," and the
third group to distilled water, which has no smell.
There is so little
data supporting aromatherapy that the National
Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, a
branch of the government, does not even discuss
aromatherapy on its website, though the agency is
now funding one study: Kiecolt-Glaser's.
Proponents of
aromatherapy point to several studies that they
claim show it works. Some data do suggest that
pleasant odors such as rose, jasmine, and lavender
might lower blood pressure, and a small study
suggests that lemon oil might reduce the doses
needed of antidepressants. But these studies were
not rigorous.
Some
better-designed studies, using placebo smells for
comparison, showed no medical benefit from
aromatherapy.
A 2001 study of 33
patients with postsurgical nausea found that oil of
peppermint was no better than rubbing alcohol or
saltwater in providing relief. A 2002 study of 17
hospice patients found that using a humidifier with
plain old water was just as effective (and not very
effective at that) as water with lavender oil in
relieving anxiety and pain. A randomized,
double-blind study in 2000 of 66 women awaiting
abortions found that aromatherapy with essential
oils (vetivert, bergamot, and geranium) was no more
effective than a placebo smell (hair conditioner) at
relieving anxiety. A 2003 randomized study of 313
cancer patients undergoing radiation similarly
concluded that aromatherapy was psychologically "not
beneficial."
Worse yet, a study
of 60 healthy men and women, published this year in
Psychosomatic Medicine, showed that those exposed to
either a pleasant odor (lemon) or an unpleasant odor
(machine oil) actually had a greater response to
experimentally induced pain than those exposed to no
odor.
"It's very
difficult to demonstrate positive effects" from
odors, said Wysocki. By contrast, "it's very easy to
demonstrate mood swings in the negative direction.
If you expose people to nasty-smelling odors, they
will get upset. If you expose them to vomit, some
people will actually get sick and vomit."
Perhaps that's
because the brain is hard-wired to detect "bad"
smells -- those like the smell of rotting food --
that could signal danger.
Reactions to
smells are also highly conditioned. "A child who
experiences the smell of roses for the first time on
a summer walk in the garden with his mother will
have different memories of the smell of roses than a
child who first experiences the smell of roses at
his mother's funeral," said Wysocki.
Expectations also
play a huge role in reaction to smells. In one of
his own studies, Wysocki divided subjects into
groups of 30 each and exposed them to the same,
unknown smell. People in one group were told they
were getting aromatherapy and they quickly got used
to the smell and soon stopped smelling it at all,
while a group that was told the smell could be
dangerous in high concentrations was increasingly
bothered by the odor as time went on, he said.
Because people
expect a benefit from aromatherapy, it may help them
feel better, said Cherie Perez , a research nurse
supervisor at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson
Cancer Center in Houston.
But it's tough to
pin down what's going on when someone feels better
after a massage with lavender oil, she said. Is it
the massage? The oil being absorbed into the skin?
The smell of the oil? The attention of the masseuse?
All of the above?
My take on this?
Enjoy a nice, warm bath if you want to relax. But
don't count on the expensive bath oil to help anyone
but the company that sold it to you.
Judy Foreman’s column runs every other week. Past
columns are available on
www.myhealthsense.com.
Listen to her live
call-in webcast radio show every Wednesday night
from 8:30 to 9:30 EST on
http://www.healthtalk.com.
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