By Doug Cary on Wednesday, 11 February 2026
Category: Clinical Kit Newsletters

Why Manual Therapy Helps Our Clients: The Science Behind Real Relief

I have just returned from several days of teaching dry needling to groups of health professionals, Physios, GPs, OTs and chiros, and one thing that keeps coming back to me on these courses is how we undervalue the benefit of touch and the skill of palpation. Palpation is what I call 'clinical touch'. That is, we are specifically aiming to locate and then feel how tissue responds to our application of mechanical force. We use other forms of touch to greet (handshake), guide (hand on the shoulder or hip), or convey empathy and support (rub back, hand on the knee) and treat (massage)

As a manual therapist, I confess to a strong bias toward the benefits of skilful touch. This pre-print article indicates the role oxytocin may play, not at a cortical level but at a spinal level, resulting in faster pain modulation and mood improvement, emphasising the importance of this time-honoured method of treatment.

​Core benefits supported by this paper​

Crucially, these benefits arise early in sensory processing (in the spinal cord) — not only in the brain.

The Main Pathway: How Massage Actually Works1. Massage → Oxytocin Release

Clinical takeaway:
Massage changes the internal chemical state of the nervous system, not just tissues mechanically

2. Oxytocin Acts Directly in the Spinal Cord

Traditionally, affective touch and pain modulation were thought to be "brain-only" processes. This paper shows otherwise.

Clinical takeaway:
Manual therapy can modify pain and comfort before signals ever reach the brain.

3. Dual Modulation: Less Pain, More Reward

Oxytocin reshapes spinal processing by rebalancing excitation and inhibition.

For pain pathways:For touch pathways:

Clinical takeaway:
Massage simultaneously:

Why This Matters for Manual Therapists1. Explains Why Gentle Techniques Work

You don't need aggressive force to influence pain:

This supports:

2. Separates Pain Intensity From Pain Experience

The study shows pain has two separable components:

Massage strongly influences the affective component, which:

Clinical language upgrade:
"I'm not just reducing pain — I'm changing how threatening the pain feels."

3. Supports Manual Therapy as a Nervous System Intervention

This paper reframes massage as:

That matters when:

Practical Clinical Applications

For early-career clinicians, this research supports:

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