Influence of baseline kinesiophobia levels on treatment outcome in people with chronic spinal pain
- Author
- Wouter Van Bogaert, Iris Coppieters (UGent) , Jeroen Kregel (UGent) , Jo Nijs, Robby De Pauw (UGent) , Mira Meeus (UGent) , Barbara Cagnie (UGent) , Lieven Danneels (UGent) and Anneleen Malfliet
- Organization
- Project
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- Een moderne neurowetenschappelijke benadering van chronische spinale pijn : pijn neurowetenschappen onderwijs gecombineerd met cognitie gerichte motor control opleiding
- STRAIN (STRessinpAIN): A comprehensive mapping of stress system interactions with pain and their contribution to extent and chronification of musculoskeletal pain
- Abstract
- Background. Pain neuroscience education (PNE) combined with cognition-targeted exercises is an effective treatment for people with chronic spinal pain (CSP). However, it is unclear why some patients benefit more from this treatment. We expect that patients with more pronounced maladaptive pain cognitions, such as kinesiophobia, might show poorer treatment responses. Objective. The objective of this study was to assess the influence of baseline kinesiophobia levels on the treatment outcomes of PNE combined with cognition-targeted exercises in people with CSP. This study was a secondary analysis of a multicenter, double-blind, randomized controlled trial. Methods. Outcome measures included a numeric rating scale for pain (NRS), the Pain Disability Index (PDI), quality of life (Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Health Survey [SF-36]), Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS), and Pain Vigilance and Awareness Questionnaire (PVAQ). Regression models were built using treatment (PNE plus cognition-targeted exercises or neck/back school plus general exercises), baseline scores on the Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK), and time (in months) as independent variables. Results. A significant 3-way interaction effect was found for the models of PDI, PCS, PVAQ, and the SF-36 mental domain, with estimates of -0.01, -0.01, -0.01, and 0.07, respectively. A significant effect of baseline TSK scores was found for the physical domain of the SF-36 (estimate = -3.16). For the NRS, no significant effect of baseline TSK scores was found. Conclusion. Our findings indicate that PNE plus cognition-targeted exercises can successfully decrease the unfavorable influence of pretreatment kinesiophobia on disability, mental health, pain catastrophizing, and hypervigilance over time in people with CSP. Nevertheless, higher scores in pretreatment kinesiophobia might still be a key factor for the lack of improvement in pain catastrophizing and hypervigilance following treatment. Regardless of the followed treatment program, pretreatment kinesiophobia was also shown to significantly influence physical health in people with CSP. Impact. This study provides novel insight into the unfavorable influence of kinesiophobia on treatment outcomes in people with CSP, and how PNE plus cognition-targeted exercises can limit this impact. Because this is one of the first studies to research possible predictors of this experimental treatment, its findings motivate further exploration of other possible influencing factors for treatment success of PNE plus cognition-targeted exercises. Lay Summary. People with chronic spinal pain and high levels of fear of movement were found to have worse treatment outcomes compared to people with low levels of fear of movement. However, our experimental treatment, which includes pain neuroscience education combined with exercise therapy that reintroduces specific movements patients might fear, can decrease this negative influence of fear of movement in these patients.
- Keywords
- Patient Education, Neck Pain, Low Back Pain, Kinesiophobia, Exercise Therapy, Chronic Pain
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01HTF2E38X0GRWJYZSXTPEZ03H
- MLA
- Van Bogaert, Wouter, et al. “Influence of Baseline Kinesiophobia Levels on Treatment Outcome in People with Chronic Spinal Pain.” PHYSICAL THERAPY, vol. 101, no. 6, 2021, doi:10.1093/ptj/pzab076.
- APA
- Van Bogaert, W., Coppieters, I., Kregel, J., Nijs, J., De Pauw, R., Meeus, M., … Malfliet, A. (2021). Influence of baseline kinesiophobia levels on treatment outcome in people with chronic spinal pain. PHYSICAL THERAPY, 101(6). https://doi.org/10.1093/ptj/pzab076
- Chicago author-date
- Van Bogaert, Wouter, Iris Coppieters, Jeroen Kregel, Jo Nijs, Robby De Pauw, Mira Meeus, Barbara Cagnie, Lieven Danneels, and Anneleen Malfliet. 2021. “Influence of Baseline Kinesiophobia Levels on Treatment Outcome in People with Chronic Spinal Pain.” PHYSICAL THERAPY 101 (6). https://doi.org/10.1093/ptj/pzab076.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Van Bogaert, Wouter, Iris Coppieters, Jeroen Kregel, Jo Nijs, Robby De Pauw, Mira Meeus, Barbara Cagnie, Lieven Danneels, and Anneleen Malfliet. 2021. “Influence of Baseline Kinesiophobia Levels on Treatment Outcome in People with Chronic Spinal Pain.” PHYSICAL THERAPY 101 (6). doi:10.1093/ptj/pzab076.
- Vancouver
- 1.Van Bogaert W, Coppieters I, Kregel J, Nijs J, De Pauw R, Meeus M, et al. Influence of baseline kinesiophobia levels on treatment outcome in people with chronic spinal pain. PHYSICAL THERAPY. 2021;101(6).
- IEEE
- [1]W. Van Bogaert et al., “Influence of baseline kinesiophobia levels on treatment outcome in people with chronic spinal pain,” PHYSICAL THERAPY, vol. 101, no. 6, 2021.
@article{01HTF2E38X0GRWJYZSXTPEZ03H, abstract = {{Background. Pain neuroscience education (PNE) combined with cognition-targeted exercises is an effective treatment for people with chronic spinal pain (CSP). However, it is unclear why some patients benefit more from this treatment. We expect that patients with more pronounced maladaptive pain cognitions, such as kinesiophobia, might show poorer treatment responses. Objective. The objective of this study was to assess the influence of baseline kinesiophobia levels on the treatment outcomes of PNE combined with cognition-targeted exercises in people with CSP. This study was a secondary analysis of a multicenter, double-blind, randomized controlled trial. Methods. Outcome measures included a numeric rating scale for pain (NRS), the Pain Disability Index (PDI), quality of life (Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Health Survey [SF-36]), Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS), and Pain Vigilance and Awareness Questionnaire (PVAQ). Regression models were built using treatment (PNE plus cognition-targeted exercises or neck/back school plus general exercises), baseline scores on the Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK), and time (in months) as independent variables. Results. A significant 3-way interaction effect was found for the models of PDI, PCS, PVAQ, and the SF-36 mental domain, with estimates of -0.01, -0.01, -0.01, and 0.07, respectively. A significant effect of baseline TSK scores was found for the physical domain of the SF-36 (estimate = -3.16). For the NRS, no significant effect of baseline TSK scores was found. Conclusion. Our findings indicate that PNE plus cognition-targeted exercises can successfully decrease the unfavorable influence of pretreatment kinesiophobia on disability, mental health, pain catastrophizing, and hypervigilance over time in people with CSP. Nevertheless, higher scores in pretreatment kinesiophobia might still be a key factor for the lack of improvement in pain catastrophizing and hypervigilance following treatment. Regardless of the followed treatment program, pretreatment kinesiophobia was also shown to significantly influence physical health in people with CSP. Impact. This study provides novel insight into the unfavorable influence of kinesiophobia on treatment outcomes in people with CSP, and how PNE plus cognition-targeted exercises can limit this impact. Because this is one of the first studies to research possible predictors of this experimental treatment, its findings motivate further exploration of other possible influencing factors for treatment success of PNE plus cognition-targeted exercises. Lay Summary. People with chronic spinal pain and high levels of fear of movement were found to have worse treatment outcomes compared to people with low levels of fear of movement. However, our experimental treatment, which includes pain neuroscience education combined with exercise therapy that reintroduces specific movements patients might fear, can decrease this negative influence of fear of movement in these patients.}}, articleno = {{pzab076}}, author = {{Van Bogaert, Wouter and Coppieters, Iris and Kregel, Jeroen and Nijs, Jo and De Pauw, Robby and Meeus, Mira and Cagnie, Barbara and Danneels, Lieven and Malfliet, Anneleen}}, issn = {{0031-9023}}, journal = {{PHYSICAL THERAPY}}, keywords = {{Patient Education,Neck Pain,Low Back Pain,Kinesiophobia,Exercise Therapy,Chronic Pain}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{6}}, pages = {{10}}, title = {{Influence of baseline kinesiophobia levels on treatment outcome in people with chronic spinal pain}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1093/ptj/pzab076}}, volume = {{101}}, year = {{2021}}, }
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