Kinesiology tape use: Benefit or a placebo?

FILE -- Kerri Walsh, of the U.S., wearing kinesiology tape at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, Aug. 21, 2008. Kinesiology tape is the thin, stretchy fabric in bright colors that you see athletes wearing these days, but the purported benefits are largely unsubstantiated. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
FILE -- Kerri Walsh, of the U.S., wearing kinesiology tape at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, Aug. 21, 2008. Kinesiology tape is the thin, stretchy fabric in bright colors that you see athletes wearing these days, but the purported benefits are largely unsubstantiated. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)

Q: Does kinesiology tape really work?

A: Olympians wear it. It was especially notable during the 2012 summer Olympics in London, when beach volleyball players and other athletes sported pink or blue strips on their shoulders and legs.

Made of a thin, light and stretchy fabric, it supposedly improves athletic performance and reduces the risk of injury better than traditional white athletic tape by amplifying proprioception, which is your sense of where your limbs are positioned.

Enthusiasts also believe that kinesiology tape speeds healing by slightly lifting skin away from sore or injured tissues, improving blood flow and lymphatic drainage, and that it supports injured joints and muscles without impeding their range of motion.

But these purported benefits are largely unsubstantiated.

"There is no solid, independent scientific evidence that kinesio tape does what it is supposed to do," said Jim

Thornton, president of the National Athletic Trainers' Association and the head trainer at Clarion University in Pennsylvania. "It is possible that it has health benefits" like improving muscle flexibility and reducing pain, he added, "but we just don't know yet."

A recent comprehensive review of relevant studies confirms that view, concluding that today's science does not show that kinesiology tape is preferable in any way to plain athletic tape for the management or prevention of sports injuries.

On the other hand, kinesiology tape may have a robust placebo effect.

In an experiment published Feb. 20 in the journal Manual Therapy, blindfolded volunteers were told that they had kinesiology tape on their legs during weight training exercises when, in some sessions, the tape was merely a sticky fabric. The study, "Kinesiology tape does not facilitate muscle performance: A deceptive controlled trial" found that the blindfolded volunteers performed the same during the exercises, whether or not they were wearing real tape.

That suggests, according to the study's authors, that when benefits do occur with the use of the tape, they should "be attributed to the placebo effect."

"We call that taping your head," Thornton said.

ActiveStyle on 04/06/2015

Upcoming Events