Trial Report Acute Effects of Osteopathic Treatment in Long COVID-19 Patients with Fatigue Symptoms: A Randomized, Controlled Trial, 2025, Zissler et al

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Acute Effects of Osteopathic Treatment in Long COVID-19 Patients with Fatigue Symptoms: A Randomized, Controlled Trial

Ulrich M. Zissler, Tino Poehlmann, Rainer Gloeckl, Sami Ibrahim, Kerstin Klupsch, Tessa Schneeberger, Inga Jarosch, Andreas Rembert Koczulla

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Background
Persistent fatigue is among the most commonly reported symptoms in patients suffering from post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (long COVID). Autonomic dysfunction, measurable via heart rate variability, has been implicated as a contributing factor.

Osteopathic manipulative treatment is a manual therapeutic approach that targets autonomic balance and may offer a novel intervention for long COVID-related fatigue.

Methods
In this single-blind, randomized controlled trial, 42 participants (mean age 51 ± 11 years; fatigue severity score: 31 ± 5 points) with long COVID and persistent fatigue ≥12 weeks post-infection were allocated to either a 45 min standardized osteopathic treatment (n = 21) or a sham-treatment group (n = 21).

Heart rate variability was assessed using a 10 min resting electrocardiogram before intervention, immediately after, and again 48 h later. The analysis of heart rate variability encompassed time-domain indices, including the root mean square of successive differences, the standard deviation of normal-to-normal intervals, mean heart rate, and mean RR interval.

Additionally, frequency-domain measures such as low-frequency, high-frequency, total power, and the LF/HF ratio were considered.

Results
The osteopathy group showed a statistically significant increase in root mean square of successive differences post-treatment (p < 0.01), accompanied by a decrease in the stress index (p < 0.05) and an increase in the mean of the standard deviations of RR intervals (p < 0.05).

Significant between-group differences were observed for mean heart rate and mean of RR intervals (p < 0.05). Frequency-domain measures also improved significantly from baseline in the intervention group.

Outlier patterns suggest potential subgroup effects, possibly due to underlying dysautonomia.

Conclusions
A single session of osteopathic treatment significantly enhanced short-term heart rate variability in long COVID patients with fatigue. These findings highlight the potential role of manual autonomic modulation as a supportive therapy in long COVID management.

Further research is needed to assess the long-term effects and optimal treatment frequency of osteopathic manipulative treatment in this population.

Web | PDF | J. Clin. Med. | Open Access
 
So how do they propose that these HRV etc. measurements translates to improvements in symptoms, functional capacity or quality of life?
 
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