Subacromial Impingement Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Subacromial Shoulder Pain and Central Nervous System Sensitization Trial (SAP-CNSS):Central Nervous System Sensitization, Muscle Function, and Pain Profiling in Patients With Subacromial Pain and in Healthy Controls.
In this case-control study, the investigators compare shoulder muscle function, pain, and central nervous system sensitization in patients with Subacromial Pain (SAP) to that in healthy controls. The investigators also examine if a relationship exists between shoulder symptom duration and central sensitization, shoulder muscle function and shoulder pain distribution in patients with SAP.
Subacromial pain (SAP), also referred to as subacromial impingement syndrome, is
characterized by pain in the shoulder joint, which is aggravated by elevation of the arm and
/ or during overhead activities. Subacromial pain has been suggested to be an "end station"
to numerous pathologies of the shoulder and can be considered to include a variety of
symptoms, and not to be seen only as a single diagnosis. In Denmark, SAP is frequently
reported as a cause of pain in the shoulder joint, and based on studies from Sweden and the
Netherlands, is estimated to cost the Danish society around 1.35 billion. DKK annually.
The primary aim of this study is to compare central nervous system sensitization (central
sensitization), shoulder muscle function and shoulder pain distribution in patients with
subacromial pain to that in pain free healthy matched controls.
The secondary aim of this study is to investigate if (symptom) dose/response relationships
exist between shoulder symptom duration and: central sensitization, shoulder muscle function
and shoulder pain distribution in patients with subacromial pain.
Although the present study is exploratory, it is the working hypothesis that i) patients with
subacromial pain have increased central sensitization, reduced shoulder muscle function, and
increased pain distribution when compared to healthy controls, and ii) symptom dose/response
relationships exist, indicated by increased central sensitization, reduced shoulder muscle
function, and increased pain distribution with longer symptom duration in patients with
subacromial pain.
The methodology includes: surface EMG recordings to quantify shoulder muscle activity;
dynamometry to quantify maximal voluntary contraction force and submaximal isometric force
steadiness; mechanical and computer-controlled algometry to quantify CNS sensitization;
computerized pain drawings to quantify pain distribution; and patient-reported assessments of
shoulder pain (SPADI) and catastrophizing (PCS).
The study does not include any intervention.
The present study is considered exploratory and the first in a line of studies using these
outcome measures in this patient population. All outcomes listed below are valued equally, as
the study is exploratory. All analyses will be used to indicate effect sizes in order to plan
for subsequent follow-up studies.
Although the study is considered exploratory, the statistical approach includes the
pre-defined primary and secondary analyses outlined below.
Primary analysis: The primary analysis will compare 36 included patients to 36 matched
healthy controls regarding the 3 main outcomes: shoulder muscle function, CNS sensitization
and shoulder pain distribution.
Secondary analysis: The secondary analysis will compare the three subgroups of patients
differing in their symptom duration (0.5-3 months of pain, 3-6 months of pain and +6 months
of pain), regarding the 3 main outcomes: CNS sensitization, shoulder muscle function, and
shoulder pain distribution, to indicate (symptom) dose/response relationships, using
descriptive statistics. The symptom duration groups may be redefined, if recruitment is slow
for one or more of the groups outlined above.
Collaborators:
Thomas Bandholm, PT, Professor, PhD. PMR-C.
Kristian Thorborg, PT, Associate Professor, PhD. Department of Clinical Medicine, University
of Copenhagen, Amager/Hvidovre Hospital.
Thomas Graven-Nielsen, Professor, Director. CNAP.
Michael Skovdal Rathleff, PT, PhD. Department of Health Science and Technology Aalborg
University.
Shellie Boudreau, Associate Professor. Department of Health Science and Technology Aalborg
University.
Louisa Wilquin, PT. School of Physiotherapy, Metropolitan University College Copenhagen.
Mikkel Bek Clausen, PT, PhD-fellow. Department of Clinical Medicine, University of
Copenhagen, Amager/Hvidovre Hospital.
Markus Due Jacobsen, PhD. National Research Center for the Working Environment.
Lars Andersen, Professor, PhD. National Research Center for the Working Environment.
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