Yoga Heals Bone Fractures

Yoga Helps Heal Bone Fractures

Published on May 10, 2011

Indian researchers recently published a randomized controlled trial showing that a yoga-based program reduced the healing time of extra-articular (situated or occurring outside a joint) fractures. While improved fracture healing may not come to mind as one of yoga’s most immediately obvious benefits, it is consistent with preliminary evidence on the beneficial effects that yoga and other mind-body practices appear to have on the immune system and inflammatory processes.

Researchers Oswal, Nagarathna, Ebnezar, and Ramaro Nagendra (2011) report that fracture healing is a considerable problem in the US as well as India, with an estimated 62 million occurring in the US annually, of which 5-10% experience delayed or failed healing. Even fractures healing at a normal rate take months to heal, during which time socioeconomic and personal costs, as well as patient quality of life, suffer considerably.

Thirty fracture patients with extra-articular fractures were randomly assigned to a yoga or control group. Both groups received conventional care for the fractures, but the yoga group received adjunctive instruction in YPET (yogic prana energization technique), a protocol consisting of “breath regulation, chanting, and visualization, which according to yogic science revitalizes the tissues by activating the subtle energies (prana) within the body.”  Yoga subjects were taught the YPET technique for one week before being given audiotapes and instructed to practice the technique on their own for thirty minutes twice daily over a 2-week period.

Both groups improved considerably, but reductions in pain and tenderness were significantly better in the yoga compared to the control group. The swelling was reduced in the YPET group 93% compared to 69.4% in controls, but this finding was not statistically significant. Perhaps most intriguingly, the increase in fracture line density and united cortices (markers of improved fracture wound healing) were significantly improved in the yoga compared to control group, leading the researchers to conclude that “add-on yoga-based YPET accelerates fracture healing.”

Interestingly, the “yoga” did not include yoga asana (physical postures), which has become synonymous with yoga and most yoga research in the West. This study is a good reminder of the diversity of yoga and how these nonphysical practices can strongly affect the physical body.

Have you experienced improved healing while practicing pranayama, chanting or meditation?

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6 responses to “Yoga Helps Heal Bone Fractures”

  1. runinl8x Avatar
    runinl8x

    Since I am still in a half cast due to come off July 1st after breking the 5th metacarpal bone in my right hand, I am going to give this a serious try.

  2. Krishankant Avatar
    Krishankant

    Hello.. My name is krishankant. Sir i am very drsperate about my right leg’s ligament fracture. I was playing football that time it happened to me. It was about 2 year ago. At that time i didn’t imagined that it was a fracture but later on i come to know it was a fracture a doctor told me 2 months after the fracture. Kindly help me. I want to play football as earlier. I am a national level football player 2 times.

    1. Timothy Burgin Avatar
      Timothy Burgin

      Please consult an experienced physical therapist or yoga therapist.

  3. dnyanesh parab Avatar
    dnyanesh parab

    Sir my name is dnyanesh. i had take months rest after fracture but i dont walk properly and also run. what type of yoga i will do for recovery? thanking u

  4. Verlie Johnson Avatar
    Verlie Johnson

    Hello
    M left fema bones was not a clean break had to have surgery to put back together. Wrist broken hip 2 chips broken knee surgery plate from thigh wire wrap around ankle. have a limp oct 23 2016 will be year’ A friend recommended yoga I want to feel normal again. I’m not depressed . Would like to know if it will help and what program.

    1. Timothy Burgin Avatar
      Timothy Burgin

      We cannot give you any medical advise so please consult an MD or PT.

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Tosca Park Avatar
About the author
Tosca Park, a 200-hour Kripalu Yoga instructor and 500-hour Integrative Yoga Therapist, is a doctoral student in Clinical Health Psychology at the University of Connecticut, where she conducts research on yoga, mindfulness, and health with her mentor, Dr. Crystal Park, and collaborators. Prior to UConn Tosca spent five years as a research intern and project manager with Kripalu’s Institute for Extraordinary Living, an organization devoted to the scientific study of yoga-based curricula. She holds bachelor’s degrees from Reed College and SUNY Empire State College in history and health psychology, respectively, and has more than 2,000 hours of training in yoga, Ayurveda, and the mind-body connection.
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