Whiplash Injuries Clinical Trial
Official title:
Preventing Chronic Whiplash Pain: Biobehavioral Approach
This study is aimed at developing ways to prevent acute pain from becoming chronic pain--specifically, pain associated with whiplash-associated disorders (WADs) from motor vehicle accidents. Research on the development of chronic pain due to musculoskeletal injury suggests that a person's initial emotional reactions, particularly fear of reinjury and subsequent avoidance of activity, contribute significantly to chronic pain and persistent disability. This study will treat people with WADs during the first three months after a motor vehicle accident with a behavioral and physical exercise program designed to encourage activity and discourage continued fear of movement, pain, and disability. The study will compare the effectiveness of two anxiety-reduction treatments to standard care in reducing pain and activity limitations in people with WADs in the 2 to 3 months after motor vehicle accidents.
More than 1.8 million people in the United States suffer from chronic pain and disability
following motor vehicle accidents (MVAs) each year. The majority of these cases start with a
relatively minor neck injury. The Quebec Task Force Study on Whiplash Associated Disorders
(WAD) was created in 1989 to determine the clinical, public health, social, and financial
determinants of WAD. Multiple studies have described the clinical features of WAD, which
include neck, shoulder, arm, low back, and head pain; tinnitus; visual symptoms; dizziness;
temporomandibular joint pain; and paraesthesias. Onset of these symptoms after the injury is
usually delayed for several hours and worsens within 24 to 48 hours. Neck pain is the most
frequent symptom, and between 14% and 42% of patients with WAD develop chronic neck pain
symptoms. Studies suggest that the neck pain will either resolve in the first few months or
persist indefinitely. One variable that may predict outcome after an MVA is the acute
emotional response immediately after the MVA.
A severe emotional reaction accompanied by neck pain and stiffness after an MVA could lead
an injured person to avoid subsequent physical activity through such mechanisms as fear
avoidance and fear of reinjury. Research investigating the evolution of chronic pain due to
musculoskeletal injury suggests that initial emotional reactivity, particularly fear of
reinjury and subsequent activity avoidance, contributes significantly to unremitting pain
and persistent disability. Research based on this model has shown that early interventions
targeting normalization of excessive emotionality and restriction of activities associated
with fear following injury effectively prevent chronic pain due to back injury. No previous
study has sought to intervene during the first three months after an MVA with a behavioral
and physical exercise program to encourage activity and discourage continued fear of
movement, pain and disability.
This study consists of two primary components: (1) To compare the effectiveness of two
anxiety-reduction treatments with standard care in reducing pain and activity limitations in
patients with WADs 2 to 3 months following MVAs. (2) To test whether psychological responses
to the initial trauma, such as fear avoidance, fear of injury, and negative affectivity,
discriminate between symptomatic WAD patients and WAD sufferers whose symptoms had resolved
2 to 3 months post-MVA.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Single Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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