Magnetic bands and bracelets for pain relief in OA

Date First Published:
December 1, 2006
Last Updated:
March 22, 2007
Report by:
Kathryn Moore & Michael Callaghan, Senior Physiotherapist and Research Physiotherapist (Manchester Royal Infirmary)
Search checked by:
Kathryn Moore, Manchester Royal Infirmary
Three-Part Question:
In [adults with OA] will [magnetic bands or bracelets] improve [symptoms and increase function]
Clinical Scenario:
A 60 year old female patient has treatment for widespread generalised OA. Her friend peruses the shopping channel and wants to buy a magnetic bracelet as a gift. Your patient wonders if this is a waste of money or may help her pain. You investigate further.
Search Strategy:
MEDLINE 1966-09/06, CINHAL 1982-090/06, AMED 1985-09/06, SPORTDiscus 1830-09/06, EMBASE 1996-09/06, via the OVID interface. In addition the Cochrane database and PEDro database were also searched.
Search Details:
(magnetic therapy.mp OR magnets) AND (osteoarthritis OR OA OR arthritis OR arthropathy OR arthrosis) LIMIT to human AND English language.
Outcome:
1 systematic review had a paragraph on magnets. 3 RCTs were also found that fulfilled the three part question.
Relevant Paper(s):
Study Title Patient Group Study type (level of evidence) Outcomes Key results Study Weaknesses
Effects of static magnets on chronic knee pain and physical function: a double blind study Hinman, M.R., Ford, J., Heyl, H. 2002 USA n=43
Chroninc pain in 1 or both knee joints due to degenerative changes.
Magnetic pad around knee
Double-blind randomised controlled clinical trial WOMAC Improvement in pain and physical function in subjects wearing magnets over placebo. Only 2 weeks long.
n=43
Used uni-polar magnets (? does this have and effect over bi-polar)
Blinding threatened.
15m Walk Slight improvement in gait speed but not statistically significant.
Double-blind placebo-controlled trail of static magnets for the treatment of osteoarthritis of the knee: results of a pilot study Wolsko, P.M., Eisenberg, D.M., Simon, L.S., Davis R.B., Walleczek, J., Mayo-tSmith, M., Kaptchuk, T. 2004 USA n = 29
Idiopathic or post traumatic OA
Magnets in knee sleeve
Group A = High strength magnets (active)
Group B = Placebo magnets (placebo)
Randomised double blind placebo controlled pilot study WOMAC Increase wrap wearing time > median time/day in active and placebo group = improvement in all WOMAC subscales @ 6/52 than wearing < median time /day. Pilot: n = 29
Decreased placebo effect due to small sample size.
Change in 50m walk time Superior results at 4 hours but not significant. No difference at 1 or 6 weeks
VAS Superior results at 4 hours but not significant. No difference at 1 or 6 weeks
Global Ax of change Superior results at 4 hours but not significant. No difference at 1 or 6 weeks
Randomised controlled trail of magnetic bracelets for relieving pain in osteoarthritis of the hip and knee. Harlow, T., Greaves, C., White, A., Brown, L., Hart A., Ernst, E. 2004 UK n = 194
OA hip or knee
Bracelets worn on ventral wrist
Group A = Standard magnets
Group B = Weak magnetst
Group C = Non-magnetic steel washers
Randomised placebo controlled trial WOMAC A @ 12/52 standard magnet group = greater pain reduction, than placebo but not different from weak magnet group. Blinding threatened
Manufacturing error = wide variability in strength of placebo, some = same strength as standard.
Can not be certain whether data shows specific effect of magnets, a placebo effect or both.
Sample patients = predominately white with severe OA (WOMAC greater than or equal to 8)
WOMAC B No difference between groups.
WOMAC C @ 12/52 standard magnet group = improvement in functioning, than placebo but not different from weak magnet group.
VAS Significant mean difference between standard magnets and placebo.
Perceived monetary value of the bracelet Participants estimate of thetmonetary worth did not differ significantly.
Complementary or alternative therapies for osteoarthritis Ernst, E. 2005 UK x1 Cochrane Review
x3 RCT
+1 other
Review Pain Improved on motion in those who had magnet therapy over placebo x1 Cochrane and x2 studies looked at pulsed magnetic fields not static magnets
Cochrane review no definitive evidence of magnet efficacy
Beneficial effects x1 study
Non beneficial x2 studies
Author Commentary:
- Differing results due to different type and strength of magnets used and length of treatment time.
- Small sample sizes.
- Difficulty maintaining blinding.
- Studies that showed no effect on pain generally used weaker magnets (19-50mtesla)
Bottom Line:
There is some contradictory evidence that magnetic bracelets maybe beneficial in relieving symptoms of OA Knee/Hip
References:
  1. Hinman, M.R., Ford, J., Heyl, H.. Effects of static magnets on chronic knee pain and physical function: a double blind study
  2. Wolsko, P.M., Eisenberg, D.M., Simon, L.S., Davis R.B., Walleczek, J., Mayo-tSmith, M., Kaptchuk, T.. Double-blind placebo-controlled trail of static magnets for the treatment of osteoarthritis of the knee: results of a pilot study
  3. Harlow, T., Greaves, C., White, A., Brown, L., Hart A., Ernst, E.. Randomised controlled trail of magnetic bracelets for relieving pain in osteoarthritis of the hip and knee.
  4. Ernst, E.. Complementary or alternative therapies for osteoarthritis