View clinical trials related to Musculoskeletal Pain.
Filter by:A pilot randomized controlled trial to assess feasibility, acceptability and generate outcome domains for a future RCT testing the efficacy of immersive virtual reality on pain intensity in pediatric amplified musculoskeletal pain syndrome.
The sporty performance exhibited by an athlete faces physiological, biomechanical and psychological activity of the athlete. It depends on both the psychological state and the elevation of the musculoskeletal system to a certain level so that the athlete can perform optimally and excellently. For this reason, we aimed to evaluate the musculoskeletal system pain of amateur and professional athletes in different disciplines and the psychosocial states such as sports confidence, depression and quality of life.
Musculoskeletal (MSK) pain is a major public health concern. Approximately one in four consult their general practitioner (GP) with a musculoskeletal problem during the course of a year, making it the largest diagnostic group. Modifiable factors including affective disorders (e.g. anxiety and depressive symptoms) and sleep problems may be important prognostic factors for MSK pain. However, there is a lack of prospective research examining the interaction between these conditions in patients with MSK pain in a GP-setting.
Chronic pain affects millions of Americans but integrative as well as conventional treatments fall short in terms of alleviating this pain. The investigators are testing a tailored online positive affect skills intervention through a high-quality, randomized controlled trial for people with chronic musculoskeletal pain. The proposed work holds promise as an effective, low cost, easily disseminated intervention to help people cope with chronic pain, decrease depression and distress that pose barriers to optimal adherence, and potentially boost the efficacy of integrative as well as conventional pain treatments.
The broad aim of this study is to implement and evaluate the efficacy of Graded Exposure Treatment (GET Living) to target elevated pain-related fears in children with chronic pain at the Stanford Pediatric Pain Management Clinic (PPMC). The investigators will evaluate the effectiveness and acceptability of this intervention for children with high levels of pain-related fear and functional disability. If proven efficacious, it will allow for the dissemination of this innovative treatment model to others working with children and adolescents with chronic pain.
Background The progression and associations of central and peripheral musculoskeletal pain, frailty, disability and fracture risks are not well known. This study aims to characterise the development and progression of different frailty, pain and disability phenotypes and their individual associations. Methods A prospective cohort of 10000 people aged > 18 will be recruited from general practice surgeries, secondary care and the general public. Data collection waves will be at baseline,and then annual follow-ups for up to five years. Data will be collected using a questionnaire asking about demographic characteristics, pain severity (0-10 scales), pain distribution (a pain Mannikin), pain quality (the McGill Pain Questionnaire), central pain (the CAP-Knee Scale), fracture risks (a modified version of the FRAX instrument), frailty (the Fried Criteria and the FRAIL scale) and disability (the FRAIL scale). Discussion Participant data will be analysed to determine phenotypic subgroups of frailty, pain and disability. Further to this, the progression of these characteristics and their influences upon health and wellbeing will be quantified.
SPECIFIC AIMS Pain in both youth and adults is a complex, subjective and personal experience, and remains poorly understood. One particularly perplexing dimension of some forms of pain is the tendency of pain to spread outside of an affected body site to adjacent location, and then to unaffected body sites. Such widespread pain may reflect an altered spatial tuning of somatosensory processing, such that lateral inhibition is diminished, thereby allowing pain to spread. To date, no therapies exist which are designed specifically to diminish or even reverse the spatial spread of pain. However, training in two-point discrimination holds the potential to retune spatial aspects of somatosensory processing and may represent a novel therapy for widespread pain. Thus, the present investigation will test the following aims: Aim 1. Do youth with chronic pain have disrupted spatial tuning of somatosensory processing? Deficits in two point tactile discrimination have long been noted in adults with chronic pain, but such deficits remain poorly documented in pediatric chronic pain patients. In order to determine if such deficits exist, youth with both chronic pain and healthy youth will undergo assessment of two point discrimination thresholds. Aim 2. Does two-point discrimination training result in diminished pain and disability in youth with somatic pain? After initial characterization of tactile discrimination thresholds, youth with chronic pain will participate in multiple sessions of either two-point discrimination training or a single-point spatially-directed attentional control condition. Training will involve up to 9 additional sessions. Efficacy of training will be assessed by 1) reductions in the spatial extent of pain, 2) reductions in pain intensity and unpleasantness, and 3) reductions in pain-related disability.
Musculoskeletal (MSK) pain in adolescents is much more persistent than commonly appreciated. It has previously been described as a self-limiting condition, but several studies indicate otherwise. In a cohort study of 564 11-year olds with weekly MSK pain, 50% of the participants still reported pain after one year. Prospective cohort studies of adults in general practice show that 16-32% of patients with knee pain still have pain after a year. In accordance with this, Kastelein et al. found that 21% of 12 to 35-year-old patients had knee pain six years after initial general practitioner (GP) contact. Collectively, these studies highlight that a significant proportion of adolescents will continue to report pain even years after the initial onset of pain. Can the adolescents with a high risk of MSK pain at follow-up be investigated? Our recent systematic review on children and adolescents with MSK pain indicates that female sex, depression, anxiety, and parental pain are associated with a higher risk of MSK pain at follow-up. However, the validity of these prognostic factors may be questioned as they have been tested in single cohorts and not validated in new external cohorts. Moreover, in accordance with our results, other studies identify emotional problems, psychological symptoms, and frequent exercise associated to a higher risk of MSK pain at follow-up. Given the paucity of high-quality evidence for prognostic factors in childhood and adolescent MSK pain, robust studies are needed to further explore prognostic factors in this population. The investigators want to follow up on this need and conduct a cohort study with a similar aim as in their review; to investigate prognosis in youth MSK pain. In this cohort study, the investigators will limit their participant group to those who are 8-19 years old, because the participants have to be able to provide self-reported data on a questionnaire. Participants aged 0-7 years will not be included as they will have difficulties in doing so and because they i) only represent 2% of all patients consulting GPs in Denmark, with a musculoskeletal complaint and ii) were sparsely represented in our systematic review which included a total of 23.933 patients. At present we lack age-specific prognostic factors in adolescents with MSK pain, although multiple prognostic factors have been identified in adult MSK pain. One systematic review found that higher pain severity upon presentation to the GP, longer pain duration, multiple-site pain, anxiety and/or depression, higher somatic perceptions and/or distress, low social support, higher baseline disability, and greater movement restriction were all associated with a poor prognosis. Systematic reviews on adult knee pain suggest an association between low/middle education level, non-skeletal comorbidity, duration of knee symptoms of > 3 months, bilateral knee symptoms, self-reported warm knee, history of non-traumatic knee symptoms, valgus alignment and an unfavorable prognosis. Similar to findings in patients with adult low back pain, there was high evidence that fear-avoidance beliefs and meagre social support at work were associated with an poor prognosis. If future studies are to tailor and target treatment for the adolescents with the highest risk of long-standing MSK pain, there is a need to identify prognostic factors for an unfavorable prognosis. The aim of this prospective cohort study is to identify the most important prognostic factors for adolescents with MSK pain in general practice.
This is a cross-sectional and prospective cohort study using a biopsychosocial approach to investigate office workers at risk of standing-induced musculoskeletal pain. The purpose of this study is to determine which factors are associated with developing or worsening of musculoskeletal pain (changes in the Visual Analogue Scale from baseline) during a 60 minute standing paradigm.
The purpose of the study is to determine whether the palmitoleic acid supplementation can reduce the serum inflammatory biomarkers and low quality of life scores due to musculoskeletal discomfort. The study design is a 2-arm placebo-controlled double blind crossover trial. The randomized sequence of a single crossover is divided into 1:1 and each supplementation is three weeks with no washout in between.