Chronic Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of the Spinal Cord Injury Exercise Guidelines on Pain: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Over 85,000 Canadians live with a spinal cord injury (SCI). The vast majority experience chronic pain from neuropathic or musculoskeletal origins, with many reporting the pain to be more physically, psychologically and socially debilitating than the injury itself. Currently, pharmaceuticals are the front line treatment recommendation for SCI pain, despite having many side-effects and giving minimal relief. Alternatively, studies conducted in controlled lab and clinical settings suggest that exercise may be a safe, effective behavioural strategy for reducing SCI-related chronic pain. Two ways in which exercise may alleviate pain are by reducing inflammation and increasing descending inhibitory control. To date, no study has tested the effects of exercise, performed in a home-/community-setting, on chronic pain in adults with SCI. Furthermore, information on the exercise dose required to alleviate chronic SCI pain is virtually non-existent, making it impossible for clinicians and fitness trainers to make evidence- informed recommendations regarding the types and amounts of exercise to perform in order to manage SCI pain. Recently (2018), an international team published two scientific SCI exercise guidelines: one to improve fitness and one to improve cardiometabolic health. These scientific guidelines have been translated into Canadian community SCI exercise guidelines and provide the exercise prescription for the proposed study. The investigators' overarching research question is: can home-/community-based exercise-prescribed according to these new SCI exercise guidelines and supported through a theory-based behavioural intervention- significantly reduce chronic pain in adults with SCI?
PROPOSED TRIAL. Using an integrated knowledge translation framework (iKT), the primary aim of this pragmatic Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) is to examine the effects of 6 months of home-/community-based exercise, prescribed according to the SCI exercise guidelines, on chronic bodily pain experienced by adults with SCI. Secondary aims are to test for 1) differential effects on musculoskeletal and neuropathic pain; 2) changes in inflammation and inhibitory control as pathways by which exercise reduces pain; 3) effects of chronic pain reductions on subjective well-being; and 4) economic benefits of the intervention. TRIAL MANAGEMENT. The experienced team of researchers has SCI-specific expertise in exercise psychology and physiology, pain and physiatry as well as health sciences expertise in immunology, biostatistics, health economics, and pragmatic RCT design and management. The team includes knowledge users representing local, provincial and national organizations, and a collaborator with lived experience of SCI. SIGNIFICANCE. The investigators' novel idea is that home-/community-based exercise performed according to the SCI exercise guidelines can be an effective behavioural strategy for reducing chronic pain in adults with SCI. Critically, this will be the first SCI exercise RCT to use chronic bodily pain as the primary outcome and to assess potential pathways by which exercise may alleviate pain. Furthermore, this will be the first pragmatic RCT of exercise as a behavioural pain management strategy conducted among adults with SCI. Importantly, our community-engaged, iKT approach will ensure rapid translation and dissemination of findings to Canadian and international end-users including clinicians, fitness programmers, people living with SCI and the community organizations that support them. ;
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