Friday, December 28, 2018
Effectiveness of opioids for chronic noncancer pain: a two-year multicenter, prospective cohort study with propensity score matching
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Thursday, December 27, 2018
Cannabidiol modulates serotonergic transmission and reverses both allodynia and anxiety-like behavior in a model of neuropathic pain
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Sunday, December 23, 2018
Do pain measurement instruments detect the effect of pain-reducing interventions in neonates? A systematic review on responsiveness
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Saturday, December 22, 2018
Effectiveness of Exercise Interventions for Pain Reduction in People With Multiple Sclerosis: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials
Publication date: January 2019
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Volume 100, Issue 1
Author(s): Thibaut Demaneuf, Zoe Aitken, Amalia Karahalios, Teng Ieng Leong, Alysha M. De Livera, George A. Jelinek, Tracey J. Weiland, Claudia H. Marck
Abstract
Objective
To systematically review the evidence of the effect of exercise compared with passive control on pain in people with multiple sclerosis.
Data Source and Study Selection
Five electronic databases were searched for randomized controlled trials published up to March 2017 that recruited people with multiple sclerosis where exercise was the intervention and pain was an outcome (PROSPERO registration number CRD42017060489).
Statistical Analysis
A random-effects meta-analysis was conducted to estimate the standardized mean difference of the effect of exercise on pain between treatment and control groups. We assessed risk of bias, fitted meta-regression models to explore heterogeneity between studies, and assessed small study effects.
Data Synthesis
Ten studies met the inclusion criteria (total sample size=389), and all studies were at high risk of bias. We found that exercise interventions were associated with less pain compared with passive control groups (standardized mean difference=−.46; 95% CI, −.92 to .00). There was high between-study heterogeneity (I2=77.0%), which was not explained by the prespecified study characteristics. There was also some evidence of small study effects.
Conclusion
This is the first systematic review of the effect of exercise interventions on pain in people with multiple sclerosis, a chronic neurological disorder that affects 2.5 million people. We found some evidence that exercise compared with passive control alleviates pain in this population, but there were limitations in reporting and study quality with high risk of bias of individual studies and heterogeneity between studies.
from ScienceDirect Publication: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation http://bit.ly/2EJcoRd
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Ability of Patient-Reported Outcomes to Characterize Patient Acceptable Symptom State (PASS) After Attending a Primary Care Physical Therapist and Medical Doctor Collaborative Service: A Cross-Sectional Study
Publication date: January 2019
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Volume 100, Issue 1
Author(s): Jeff Houck, Daniel Kang, Tyler Cuddeford, Sarah Rahkola
Abstract
Objectives
To determine if the Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS) physical function, pain interference, self-efficacy, and global rating of normal function (GRNF) scales are able to accurately characterize a patient’s acceptable symptom state (PASS).
Design
A cross-sectional analysis, using receiver operator curves and chi-square analysis to explore criteria to determine thresholds (80% and 95% sensitivity/specificity) for PASS that are applicable to PROMIS and GRNF scales.
Setting
Phone survey after primary care.
Participants
Patients (N=94) attending primary care for musculoskeletal problems.
Interventions
Not applicable.
Main Outcomes Measures
Accuracy and proportion of patients classified as PASS Yes or No.
Results
Receiver operator curve analysis showed significant area under the curve (AUC) values for each PROMIS scale (AUC>.72) and the GRNF rating (AUC=.74). Identified PROMIS thresholds suggested PASS was achieved when scores were at or slightly worse than the US population average. A score of ≥7 and ≤4 characterized patients that were PASS Yes and No, respectively, on the GRNF rating. A moderate (80%) specificity/sensitivity criteria yielded 72.3%-73.5% accuracy for a majority of participants (>69.9%).
Conclusion
This analysis suggests the PROMIS and GRNF scales are able to characterize PASS status with moderate accuracy (∼70%) for a large portion of patients (∼70%). New to this study is the association of self-efficacy with PASS status. PROMIS scales at or slightly worse than the US population average characterized PASS status.
from ScienceDirect Publication: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation http://bit.ly/2EJ5vQt
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Building a Rehabilitative Care Measurement Instrument to Improve the Patient Experience
Publication date: January 2019
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Volume 100, Issue 1
Author(s): Josephine McMurray, Heather McNeil, Alicia Gordon, Jacobi Elliott, Paul Stolee
Abstract
Objective
To develop and test face and content validity, and user interface design of a rehabilitative care patient experience measure.
Design
Mixed methods, cross-sectional validation study that included subject matter expert input. Cognitive interviewing tested user interface and design.
Setting
Outpatient rehabilitative care settings.
Participants
Subject matter experts (n=3), health care providers (n=137), and patients and caregivers (n=5) contributed to the question development. Convenience and snowball sampling were used to recruit rehabilitative care patients postdischarge (n=9) for cognitive interviews to optimize survey design and user interface (N=154).
Interventions
Not applicable.
Main Outcome Measure
This novel survey instrument measures 6 concepts previously identified as key to outpatient rehabilitative care patients’ experience: ecosystem issues, client and informal caregiver engagement, patient and health care provider relations, pain and functional status, group and individual identity, and open-ended feedback.
Results
502 survey questions from psychometrically tested instruments, secondary data from a related ethnographic study, and consultations with health care providers, patients, caregivers, and subject matter experts, were analyzed to create a 10-item questionnaire representing 6 key constructs that influence patient experience quality. Cognitive interviewing with 9 patients (3 rounds of 3 participants each), produced 3 progressively edited versions of the survey instrument. A final version required no further modifications.
Discussion
Rehabilitative care clients have characteristics that differentiate their experience from that of other sectors and patient groups, warranting a distinct experience measure. The survey instrument includes a parsimonious set of questions that address strategic issues in the ongoing improvement of care delivery and the patient experience in the rehabilitative care sector.
Conclusion
The rehabilitative care patient experience survey instrument developed has an acceptable user interface, and content and face validity. Psychometric testing of the survey instrument is reported elsewhere.
from ScienceDirect Publication: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation http://bit.ly/2EFevVY
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Efficacy of Internet-Delivered Mindfulness for Improving Depression in Caregivers of People With Spinal Cord Injuries and Chronic Neuropathic Pain: A Randomized Controlled Feasibility Trial
Publication date: January 2019
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Volume 100, Issue 1
Author(s): Jasmine Heath Hearn, Imogen Cotter, Katherine Anne Finlay
Abstract
Objectives
To explore the feasibility and efficacy of web-based mindfulness training for carers of people with spinal cord injury (SCI).
Design
Randomized controlled feasibility study with 3-month follow-up.
Setting
Community setting.
Participants
Spouses or family caregivers (N=55) of people with SCI and chronic neuropathic pain were recruited via the direct care team and advertisements. Participants were older than 18 years (no upper age limit), with Internet access for the duration of the study. Participants were randomly allocated to an 8-week online mindfulness training intervention (n=28), or to receive 8 weeks of psychoeducational materials on SCI and chronic pain (n=27).
Interventions
An established web-based, mindfulness training course was delivered over 8 weeks. Participants completed 10 minutes of mindfulness practices, twice per day, 6 days per week, totaling 960 minutes. The control group received a weekly e-mail with psychoeducational materials (based on the established elements) on SCI and pain for 8 weeks.
Main Outcome Measure
Depression severity.
Results
Mindfulness reduced depression severity more than psychoeducation at T2 (mean difference= −.891; 95% confidence interval,−1.48 to −.30) and T3 (mean difference=−1.96; 95% confidence interval, −2.94 to −.97). Mindfulness training also reduced anxiety at T2 (mean difference=−.888; 95% confidence interval, −1.40 to −.38) and T3 (mean difference=−2.44; 95% confidence interval, −3.20 to −1.69).
Conclusions
Results indicate that Internet-delivered mindfulness training offers unique benefits and is viable for caregivers of people with SCI and chronic neuropathic pain. Further work should explore the feasibility of combined education and mindfulness training incorporating both patient and caregiver, for optimum benefit.
from ScienceDirect Publication: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation http://bit.ly/2AaHu0U
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Effects of a Patient-Centered Graded Exposure Intervention Added to Manual Therapy for Women With Chronic Pelvic Pain: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Publication date: January 2019
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Volume 100, Issue 1
Author(s): Ma José Ariza-Mateos, Irene Cabrera-Martos, Araceli Ortiz-Rubio, Irene Torres-Sánchez, Janet RodrÃguez-Torres, Marie Carmen Valenza
Abstract
Objective
To explore the effects of a 6-week patient-centered graded exposure intervention added to manual therapy in women with chronic pelvic pain (CPP) and fear of movement/(re)injury.
Design
Prospective 3-armed randomized controlled trial.
Setting
Faculty of Health Sciences.
Participants
A total of 49 women with CPP and substantial fear of movement were randomly allocated to 1 of 3 groups: (1) patient-centered graded exposure intervention added to manual therapy; (2) manual therapy; (3) control group.
Interventions
The 6-week intervention consisted of 12 sessions in the group receiving manual therapy and 6 additional sessions of graded exposure therapy in the group receiving both interventions.
Main Outcome Measures
Primary outcomes were fear-avoidance behavior assessed using the Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire and pain interference and severity evaluated with the Brief Pain Inventory. The secondary outcome was disability evaluated with the Oswestry Disability Index. All the variables were assessed in a blinded manner at baseline, after the treatment, and at 3-month follow-up.
Results
Our results show interaction effects (P<.05) for all the outcomes. Graded exposure added to manual therapy is distinctly superior to manual therapy alone in maintaining improvements for long-term fear-avoidance behavior and physical functioning.
Conclusions
Graded exposure added to manual therapy is a promising approach with long-term effects for women with CPP and fear of movement/(re)injury.
from ScienceDirect Publication: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation http://bit.ly/2EMooBW
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Friday, December 21, 2018
Social Influences on Peer Judgements about Chronic Pain and Disability
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Wednesday, December 19, 2018
AAAPT Diagnostic Criteria for Acute Sickle Cell Disease Pain
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Cross-Cultural Adaptation, Validity, and Reliability Study of the Turkish Version of Back Performance Scale
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Determinants of Patient Satisfaction 2 Years After Spinal Deformity Surgery: A Latent Class Analysis
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Effectiveness of Kinesio Taping in Patients With Chronic Nonspecific Low Back Pain: A Systematic Review With Meta-analysis
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Comparison of Two Posterior Three-Point Fixation Techniques for Treating Reducible Atlantoaxial Dislocation
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Saturday, December 15, 2018
Decreasing pain ratings in chronic arm pain through changing a virtual body: different strategies for different pain types
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Thursday, December 13, 2018
[Correspondence] Low back pain
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[Correspondence] Low back pain
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[Correspondence] Low back pain
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[Correspondence] Low back pain
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[Correspondence] Low back pain
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[Correspondence] Low back pain – Authors' reply
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Tuesday, December 11, 2018
Exercise therapy in addition to an orthosis reduces pain more than an orthosis alone in patients with thumb base osteoarthritis: a propensity score matching study
Publication date: Available online 11 December 2018
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Author(s): R.M. Wouters, J. Tsehaie, H.P. Slijper, S.E.R. Hovius, R. Feitz, Hand-Wrist Study Group, R.W. Selles
Abstract
Objective
To compare the effect of exercises and orthotics with orthotics alone on pain and hand function in patients with thumb base (CMC-1) osteoarthritis (OA) and to predict outcomes on pain and hand function of exercises and orthotics.
Design
Prospective cohort study with propensity score matching
Setting
Data collection took place in thirteen outpatient clinics for hand surgery and hand therapy in the Netherlands.
Participants
A consecutive, population-based sample of 173 patients with CMC-1 OA was included in this study of which 84 were matched on baseline demographics and baseline primary outcomes.
Interventions
Exercises and orthotics versus orthotics alone.
Main Outcome Measure(s)
Primary outcomes included pain and hand function at three months, measured using Visual Analogue Scales (0-100, VAS) and the Michigan Hand outcomes Questionnaire (0-100, MHQ).
Results
A larger decrease in VAS pain at rest (11.1 points difference, 95% Confidence interval(CI): 1.9, 20.3, p=0.002) and during physical load (22.7 points difference, 95% CI: 13.6, 31.0, p<0.001,) was found in the exercise + orthotic group compared to the orthotic group. Additionally, larger improvement was found for the MHQ subscales pain, work performance, aesthetics and satisfaction in the exercise + orthotic group. No differences were found on other outcomes. Baseline scores of metacarpophalangeal flexion, presence of scapho-trapezio-trapezoid OA, VAS pain at rest, heavy physical labor and MHQ total predicted primary outcomes for the total exercise + orthotic group (N=131).
Conclusions
Conservative treatment for patients with CMC-1 OA should include exercises, since there is a relatively large treatment effect compared to using an orthosis alone. Future research should study exercises and predictors in a more standardized setting to confirm this finding.
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Monday, December 10, 2018
Racial-Ethnic Differences in Osteoarthritis Pain and Disability: A Meta-Analysis
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Identifying the pathways required for coping behaviours associated with sustained pain
Identifying the pathways required for coping behaviours associated with sustained pain
Identifying the pathways required for coping behaviours associated with sustained pain, Published online: 10 December 2018; doi:10.1038/s41586-018-0793-8
In mice, the ablation of spinal neurons that co-express TAC1 and LBX1 leads to the loss of coping responses to sustained pain without affecting reflexive defensive reactions to external threats.from Nature - Issue - nature.com science feeds https://ift.tt/2B9d6nn
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Friday, December 7, 2018
Differential predictors of pain severity over 12 months following non-catastrophic injury sustained in a road traffic crash
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The pain dynamics of small fiber neuropathy
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Tropomyosin receptor kinase B receptor activation in the locus coeruleus restores impairment of endogenous analgesia at a late stage following nerve injury in rats
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Wednesday, December 5, 2018
Comparative Responsiveness of the PROMIS Pain Interference Short Forms with Legacy Pain Measures: Results from Three Randomized Clinical Trials
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Tuesday, December 4, 2018
Adjacent Disc Degeneration After Lumbar Total Disc Replacement or Nonoperative Treatment: A Randomized Study with 8-year Follow-up
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Proprioceptive Weighting Ratio for Balance Control in Static Standing Is Reduced in Elderly Patients With Non–Specific Low Back Pain
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Considering Spine Surgery: A Web-Based Calculator for Communicating Estimates of Personalized Treatment Outcomes
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Opioid Dependence and Prolonged Length of Stay in Lumbar Fusion: A Retrospective Study Utilizing the National Inpatient Sample 2003–2014
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Highly Cited Works in Spinal Disorders: The Top 100 Most Cited Papers Published in Spine Journals
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Efficacy and Safety of Full-endoscopic Decompression via Interlaminar Approach for Central or Lateral Recess Spinal Stenosis of the Lumbar Spine: A Meta-analysis
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Epidural Abscess: A Propensity Analysis of Surgical Treatment Strategies
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AAPT Diagnostic Criteria for Peripheral Neuropathic Pain: Focal and Segmental Disorders
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Monday, December 3, 2018
The effect of spinal mobilization with leg movement in patients with lumbar radiculopathy – A double blind randomized controlled trial
Publication date: Available online 3 December 2018
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Author(s): Kiran Satpute, Toby Hall, Richa Bisen, Pramod Lokhande
Abstract
Objectives
To evaluate the effect of spinal mobilization with leg movement (SMWLM) on low back and leg pain intensity, disability, pain centralization and patient satisfaction in subjects with lumbar radiculopathy.
Design
A double blind randomized controlled trial.
Setting
General Hospital
Participants
Sixty adults (mean age 44 years) with sub-acute lumbar radiculopathy
Interventions
Subjects were randomly allocated to receive SMWLM, exercise and electrotherapy (n = 30) or exercise and electrotherapy alone (n = 30). All subjects received 6 sessions over 2 weeks.
Main Outcome Measures
The primary outcomes were leg pain intensity and Oswestry disability index score. Secondary variables were low back pain intensity, global rating of change (GROC), straight leg raise (SLR) and lumbar range of motion (ROM). Variables were evaluated blind at base line, post intervention, and 3 and 6 months follow-up.
Results
Significant and clinically meaningful improvement occurred in all outcome variables. At 2 weeks the SMWLM group had significantly greater improvement than the control group in leg pain (MD 2.4, 95% CI 2.0 to 2.7) and disability (MD 3.9 (5.5 to 2.2). Similarly at 6 months the SMWLM group had significantly greater improvement than the control group in leg pain (MD 4.4, 95% CI 4.0 to 4.8) and disability (MD 4.7 (6.3to 3.1). The SMWLM group also reported greater improvement in the GROC and in SLR ROM.
Conclusion
In patients with lumbar radiculopathy, the addition of SMWLM provided significantly improved benefits in terms of leg and back pain, disability, SLR ROM and patient satisfaction in the short-and long-term.
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Saturday, December 1, 2018
ENLARGED AREAS OF PAIN AND PRESSURE HYPERSENSITIVITY BY SPATIALLY DISTRIBUTED INTRAMUSCULAR INJECTIONS OF LOW-DOSE NERVE GROWTH FACTOR
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