| Literature DB >> 22136113 |
Inge Ris Hansen1, Karen Søgaard, Robin Christensen, Bente Thomsen, Claus Manniche, Birgit Juul-Kristensen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many patients suffer from chronic neck pain following a whiplash injury. A combination of cognitive, behavioural therapy with physiotherapy interventions has been indicated to be effective in the management of patients with chronic whiplash-associated disorders. The objective is to present the design of a randomised controlled trial (RCT) aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of a combined individual physical and cognitive behavioural-graded activity program on self-reported general physical function, in addition to neck function, pain, disability and quality of life in patients with chronic neck pain following whiplash injury compared with a matched control group measured at baseline and 4 and 12 months after baseline. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22136113 PMCID: PMC3266656 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-12-274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Hypothesis of the intervention effect for patients with chronic neck pain after a whiplash accident.
Figure 2Flowchart of the patients in the study.
Clinical outcomes used for measurement of treatment effect on muscle strategy, function and treatment modifiers
| Test description | Purpose |
|---|---|
| The craniocervical flexion test [ | To test changed neuromuscular control of the neck |
| Neck joint position error test [ | To test change in neck positioning sense |
| Gaze stability test [ | To test change in head and eye coordination |
| Cervical range of movement [ | To test change of neck mobility |
| Mechanical allodynia [ | To test for potential treatment modifiers |
Patient reported outcomes used for measured of treatment effect on pain and function
| Outcome name | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Self-rated measure Global Perceived Effect (GPE) of global impression of recovery, with the question: "Compared to when this treatment first started, how would you describe your neck this last week?" (range 0-11) where minus five represents vastly worse, 0 represents unchanged, and five represents completely recovered (Kamper et al., 2010, Stewart et al., 2007a, Geisser et al., 2010) (range 0-11) | To measure perceived change |
| Neck Disability Index (NDI) [ | To test for change in neck pain and neck disability, related to daily activities |
| Pain Specific Functioning Scale, comprising three patient-rated important activities, rated from the level of difficulty with lower scores representing better function (range 0-10 scale) | To test for change in self- reported function |
| Numerical rating scale, with higher scores representing greater pain bothersomeness, (Stewart et al., 2007a, Young et al., 2010) (range 0-10) | To test for change in pain bothersomeness |
| TAMPA Scale of Kinesiophobia (fear of re-injury due to movement), a psychological distress questionnaire, with a score above 37 indicating a high degree of kinesiophobia (Cleland et al., 2008, Nederhand et al., 2004, Nederhand et al., 2006) (range 17-68), | To test for change in fear of movement |
| The Impact of Events Scale, [ | To test for change in post-traumatic stress symptoms |
| The Euroqol-5D capturing the patient's perceived state of health, with predefined end-points, high value is good health and low value is bad health [ | To test for change in quality of life |