Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05209659 |
Other study ID # |
290 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 15, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
September 2022 |
Source |
Youngstown State University |
Contact |
Damian L Keter, DPT, PhD(c) |
Phone |
216-791-3800 |
Email |
dlketer[@]student.ysu.edu |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Mechanism research has identified pain adaptive and non-adaptive phenotypes by documenting
the response to an ice immersion bath. Pain adaptive individuals exhibited a rapid response
to cold and a rapid resolution of symptoms with continued exposure. Non-pain adaptive
individuals had the opposite. Pain-adaptive individuals have the endogenous (internal)
capacity to self-modulate pain therefore may pursue active self management techniques,
whereas non-pain adaptive phenotypes may be more prone to use of external mechanisms (e.g.,
analgesic medications) for pain relief. A pain adaptive individual is likely to benefit from
all forms of conservative active or passive pain modulatory treatments and is expected to
have a favorable prognosis. Although this finding is useful, ice bath immersion is an
impractical assessment for clinical practice, leaving clinicians with the inability to
identify pain adaptive individuals.
Emerging evidence indicates that an associative clinical response associated with an early
within session (during the first visit) and between session (from the first to the second
visit) during a posterior to anterior mobilization, identifies individuals who have a
favorable prognosis with spinal pain. While neurophysiological basis for the analgesic effect
of manual therapy has been proposed to date no one has investigated if the associative
clinical response is purely another way of identifying pain adaptive or non-pain adaptive
individuals. If a within-session or between-session response is associated with the pain
adaptive mechanism found during an ice-bath immersion, clinicians could adopt the clinical
evaluation technique and improve their ability to identify proper patients for management.
The investigators will evaluate the relationship between the pain adaptive mechanistic
response from ice-bath immersion and the associative clinical response that occurs during a
PA mobilization of the spine.
Description:
This proof-of-concept study uses an observational design to assess correlation between the
below stated factors. This study design has been recommended in analgesic management in
investigating novel mechanistic relationships. A convenience sample will be recruited from
outpatient orthopedic clinics and University sites across a geographically diverse segment of
the United States. Individuals will be educated on the purpose and risks of the study via
informed consent and will determine if they would like to participate. An a priori power
analysis was performed at the .05 significance level with a projected correlation of (.60)
and a sample size of 28 participants was recommended to achieve 80 percent power. Given the
single session design with virtual/electronic follow up a low dropout rate related to
compliance is anticipated. Given the noxious application and the ability to terminate session
if requested, along with aforementioned, a total drop-out rate of 10% will be anticipated. A
sample size of 32 will be utilized in an attempt to obtain 28 participants.
Data collection will be completed by investigators and/or clinicians whom have been trained
directly by investigators on the research protocol or by the research team.
Following consent, the individuals will follow the protocol below:
1. Baseline patient reported measurements will be obtained including McGill Pain
Questionnaire, Fear Avoidance Belief Questionnaire, Modified Oswestry Low Back Pain
Disability Questionnaire, Expectations of Treatment Scale, Hospital Anxiety and
Depression Scale, Fatigue Severity Scale, Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS) (current,
best, and worst)
2. Baseline Demographics which have shown prognostic value
1. Age
2. Gender
3. Symptom Duration
4. Joint(s) involved
5. Presence of referred leg pain
3. Baseline Objective measures will be obtained including:
1. Active Range of Motion at lumbar spine and Coxofemoral joint
2. Neuromuscular Screening (Reflexes, light touch sensation L3-S1, neural testing)
3. Cardiopulmonary screening (Blood pressure, heart rate, pulse-oximetry, AAA)
4. Joint mobility at lumbosacral spine via Posterior -> Anterior (PA) mobilizations
performed central and unilateral; Assess for comparable sign, If present progress
to below
5. Pain modulation/adaptability assessment - Protocol outlined below:
6. Application of non-thrust Central or Unilateral PA mobilization application as
chosen by the clinician in a pragmatic manner to address patients comparable sign.
- Technique, grade, time, and location to be recorded
- Pain (NPRS) to be graded continuously throughout the technique and recorded
Pain Adaptability/Modulation assessment:
Throughout the experiment, the participants will sit comfortably in a chair with arms
rested on the arm rests and legs testing on the floor. The room temperature will be
controlled at 21-23 deg C. Participants will be assured that cold stimulation will not
cause any physical damage to their body, and are allowed to withdraw from the
experiments at any time.
Cold pressor pain
- A bucket of ice and water, a temperature of 1.0C to 4.0C will be maintained by
stirring regularly to prevent an increase of water temperature surrounding the
hand.
- Participants will submerge their left hand to 5cm above the wrist with their palm
facing down. They will be encouraged to keep their hand in the water for 5 minutes.
If they find the pain becoming intolerable, they can withdraw their hand
immediately.
- Pain intensity - During the cold stimulation, participants will be asked to rate
the intensity of pain continuously using a 0 to 10 NPRS (0 = no pain at all; 10 =
worst pain possible).
- McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ) - will be completed after cold stimulation. The MPQ
is designed to provide qualitative and quantitative measures of pain that can be
examined statistically. The MPQ consists of 4 major classes of word descriptors
(sensory, affective, evaluative, and miscellaneous) for participants to specify
subjective pain experience.
- Pressure pain threshold (PPT) - An electronic pressure algometer (Pain Test FPX 25)
with a probe area of 1 cm squared will be used. Participants will indicate when the
pressure stimulus becomes just painful. PPT's will be determined by averaging 3
assessments taken at 1-minute intervals. It will take 2 to 3 minutes to complete
the PPT tests, which will lead to some participants undertaking a 6-minute cold
stimulation test.
- Sensory assessment - All PPT assessments will be tested at 3 sites: bilateral
extensor carpi radialis, at 3 cm distal to the lateral end of the cubic crease on
the elbow, and on the right soleus at 8 cm proximal to medial malleolus.
- All PPT Assessments will be performed before, during (3 minutes after the
initiation of cold stimulation), and 20 minutes post termination of Cold
Stimulation.
4. 2-week follow up via phone call, text message, email, or virtual meeting to assess NPRS
and GROC.