| Literature DB >> 25409985 |
Michael A McCaskey1, Corina Schuster-Amft, Brigitte Wirth, Zorica Suica, Eling D de Bruin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Proprioceptive training (PrT) is popularly applied as preventive or rehabilitative exercise method in various sports and rehabilitation settings. Its effect on pain and function is only poorly evaluated. The aim of this systematic review was to summarise and analyse the existing data on the effects of PrT on pain alleviation and functional restoration in patients with chronic (≥ 3 months) neck- or back pain.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25409985 PMCID: PMC4247630 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-15-382
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Risk of bias summary: review authors’ judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study. (+) = Low risk of bias; (−) = high risk of bias; (?) = unclear risk of bias.
Figure 2Screening progress flow chart. n = number of references; RCT = randomized controlled trials, FT = full-texts.
Overview of included studies and descriptive study data
| Reference | Participants | Intervention | Comparator | Outcome | Group effect | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beinert [ | Total N | 34 | 5 weeks, 15×15 min., three balance exercises with increasing difficulty: single leg, tandem, and standing on a wobble board | No intervention; participants were instructed to maintain physical activity as usual | Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NRS) | ↗ |
| CH, 2013 | Age: | 23 | Head relocation from neutral position | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | NP | Pre-rotated head relocation | ↗ | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | No | |||||
| Gender (f/m): | nA | |||||
| Chung [ | Total N | 24 | 8 weeks, 3 sessions/week (duration not specified), 10 Min. warm-up followed by four lumbar stabilisation exercises on a small gymnastics ball | 8 weeks, 3 sessions/week (duration not specified), 10 Min. warm-up followed by four lumbar stabilisation exercises on a mat | Pain intensity VAS | = |
| KR, 2013 | Age: | 38 | Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) Weight bearing (postural sway) Multifidus cross section L2 and L3 Multifidus cross section L4 and L5 | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | = | ||||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | = | ||||
| Gender (f/m): | 11/13 | ↗ | ||||
| Costa [ | Total N | 154 | 8 weeks, 12×30 min. motor control exercise to improve function of specific muscles of the low back and control of posture and movement | 8 weeks, 12×25 min. Shortwave Diathermy, Ultrasound (placebo) | Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NRS) | = |
| AU, 2011 | Age: | 54 | Patient Specific Functional Scale (PSFS) | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | Global Impression of Recovery (GPE) | ↗ | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | No | Roland Morris Score (RMS) | ↗ | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 28/51 | |||||
| Frih [ | Total N | 107 | 4 weeks, 28×30 min. home-based rehabilitation programme: postural control, stretching and strengthening exercises | 4 weeks, 12×90 min. standard rehabilitation programme: analgesic, electrotherapy, pain management, stretching, proprioceptive, and strengthening exercises | Pain intensity VAS | ↗ |
| TN, 2004 | Age: | 36 | MacRae Schöber Index | = | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | Finger-to-Floor (FTF) distance | = | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Thigh-leg (TL) angle | = | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 80/25 | Shirado Test | ↗ | |||
| Sorensen Test | = | |||||
| Quebec Functional Index | = | |||||
| Gatti [ | Total N | 179 | 5 weeks, 10×60min. treadmill (15 min.), flexibility (30 min.), and trunk balance (15 min.) exercises | 5 weeks, 10×60 min. treadmill (15 min.), flexibility (15 min.), and strengthening (15 min.) exercises | Pain Intensity VAS (0 to 100) | = |
| IT, 2009 | Age: | 58 | Roland Morris Score (RMS) | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | Quality of Life, physical (SF-12p) | ↗ | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Quality of Life, mental (SF-12m) | = | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 11/23 | |||||
| Hudson [ | Total N | 14 | 6 weeks, 6×60 min. multimodal treatments: coordinative, proprioceptive, strengthening, and educational components | 6 weeks, 6-8×20 min. usual care (any combination of exercise, education, mobilisations, manipulations, electrotherapy, or acupuncture) | Neck Disability Index (NDI) | = |
| UK, 2010 | Age: | 43 | Numerical Pain Rating Scale (NRS) | = | ||
| Pain area: | NP | |||||
| Cl. confirmed: | No | |||||
| Gender (f/m): | 8/4 | |||||
| Humphreys [ | Total N | 63 | 4 weeks, 56 treatments (twice a day, duration not specified) coordinative exercises (eye-head-neck coordination) | No intervention | Head Repositioning HRA | ↗ |
| UK, 2002 | Age: | nA | Self-reported Pain Intensity (VAS) | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | NP | |||||
| Cl. confirmed: | No | |||||
| Gender (f/m): | nA | |||||
| Jin [ | Total N | 14 | 4 weeks, 20×40 Min. Six different quadruped exercises on a wobble board | 4 weeks, 20×40 Min. physical therapy (20 Min. hot press; 5 Min. ultrasound; 15 Min. transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation) | Pain intensity VAS | ↗ |
| KR, 2013 | Age: | 45 | Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | Anticipatory postural adjustment | ↗ | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | No | |||||
| Gender (f/m): | 8/6 | |||||
| Johannsen [ | Total N | 40 | 12 weeks, 24×60min. warm up (10 min.) coordinative, proprioceptive, balance, and stability exercises (40 min.), stretching (10 min.) | 12 weeks, 24×60min. endurance (10 min.), dynamic strengthening exercises (40 min.), and stretching (10 min.) | Isokinetic back strength (KinCom II) | = |
| DK, 1999 | Age: | 38 | Patient's general assessment | = | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | Pain score (0-8) | = | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Mobility score (cm) | = | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 93/120 | |||||
| Jull [ | Total N | 64 | 6 weeks, 84×10 min. (twice per day) proprioceptive training (head relocation practice), coordinative exercises (eye/head coordination) | 6 weeks, 84×10 min. (twice per week) strengthening of deep cervical flexor muscles | Joint Position Error (JPE) | = |
| AU, 2005 | Age: | 41 | Left JPE | ↙ | ||
| Pain area: | NP | Right JPE | = | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Extension Neck Disability Index (NDI) | = | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 64/0 | Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) | = | |||
| Marshall [ | Total N | 54 | 4 weeks usual care, then 12 weeks, 12 proprioceptive and strengthening exercises using the therapy ball (Swiss ball) | 4 weeks usual care, then 12 weeks home based therapy regime based on commonly recommended low back strengthening exercises | Oswestry Disability Index | = |
| NZ, 2008 | Age: | 35 | FR-Response | = | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | Feed-forward activation assessment | = | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | No | |||||
| Gender (f/m): | 27/27 | |||||
| Morone [ | Total N | 75 | 4 weeks, 12×45 min. perceptive rehabilitation with proprioceptive components | 3 weeks, 10 sessions (duration per session not reported), Back School based on re-education of breathing, stretching, postural, and strengthening exercises | Visual Analogue Scale | ↗ |
| IT, 2011 | Age: | 55 | McGill Pain Rating Index | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | Oswestry Disability Index | = | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Wadell Disability Index | = | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 54/21 | |||||
| Morone [ | Total N | 75 | 4 weeks, 12×45 min. perceptive rehabilitation with proprioceptive components | No intervention | Visual Analogue Scale | ↗ |
| IT, 2011 [ | Age: | 55 | McGill Pain Rating Index | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | Oswestry Disability Index | = | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Wadell Disability Index | = | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 54/21 | |||||
| Paolucci [ | Total N | 45 59 | 4 weeks, 12×45 min. perceptive treatment with proprioceptive components | 3 weeks, 10 sessions (duration per session not reported), Back School based on re-education of breathing, stretching, postural, and strengthening exercises | McGill Pain Questionnaire | = |
| IT, 2012 | Age: | LBP | Centre of Pressure (CoP) area | nA | ||
| Pain area: | Yes | CoP sway length | nA | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | nA | CoP sway velocity AP | nA | |||
| Gender (f/m): | CoP sway velocity LL | nA | ||||
| Revel [ | Total N | 60 | 8 weeks, 16×45min. symptomatic analgesics, proprioceptive (head relocation practice), and coordinative (eye/head coordination) exercises, and coordinative exercises | Symptomatic analgesics | Head Repositioning Accuracy (HRA) | ↗ |
| FR, 1994 | Age: | 46.8 | Self-reported pain VAS | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | NP | Active Range of Motion: Extension | = | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Active Range of Motion: Rotation | ↗ | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 51/10 | NSAID intake | = | |||
| Self-assessed functional improvement | ↗ | |||||
| Sorensen [ | Total N | 207 | 3 to 9 weeks, 1 to 3 × 30 to 60 min. educational program, stretching | Undefined duration. Symptom based physical training programme, motor control of posture and movement OR therapy ball and dynamic exercises for balance, endurance, and strength | Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NRS) | = |
| DK, 2012 | Age: | 39.5 | Activity Limitation Scale Fear | = | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire Back | ↙ | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Beliefs Questionnaire | = | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 105/95 | |||||
| Suni [ | Total N | 106 | 48 weeks, 96 × 10 exercises for balance, coordination, strength, stretching, motor control, and educational | No intervention (control group) | VAS (past 7 days) | = |
| FI, 2006 | Age: | 47.3 | ODI | = | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | PDI | = | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | |||||
| Gender (f/m): | 0/100 | |||||
| Stankovic [ | Total N | 160 | 4 weeks, 20×30 min. motor control, strengthening, relaxation, breathing, stretching, proprioceptive, and coordinative exercises | 4 weeks, 20×30 min. strengthening and stretching aerobic exercises | Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) | ↗ |
| RS, 2011 | Age: | 49.5 | ODI subscale Pain | ↗ | ||
| Pain area: | LBP | |||||
| Cl. confirmed: | No | |||||
| Gender (f/m): | 60/140 | |||||
| Taimela [ | Total N | 76 | 12 weeks, 12×45min. multimodal treatment: muscle endurance and coordination, relaxation training, educational, motor control, postural control | Neck lectures and activated home exercises (home exercises were introduced and explained in the first two weeks) | Cervical range of motion Cervical | = |
| FI, 1999 | Age: | 42.3 | Pressure pain threshold | = | ||
| Pain area: | NP | Pain intensity (100mm VAS) | = | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Fear Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire | = | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 36/14 | Physical impairment in daily activities | = | |||
| Taimela [ | Total N | 76 | 12 weeks, 12×45min. multimodal treatment: muscle endurance and coordination, relaxation training, educational, motor control, postural control | Neck lecture and recommendation of exercises | Cervical range of motion Cervical | = |
| FI, 1999 | Age: | 42.3 | Pressure pain threshold | = | ||
| Pain area: | NP | Pain intensity (100mm VAS) | ↗ | |||
| Cl. confirmed: | Yes | Fear Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire | = | |||
| Gender (f/m): | 36/14 | Physical impairment in daily activities | = |
Legend: LBP = low back pain; NP = neck pain; ↗ in favour of proprioceptive training (PrT); ↙in favour of comparator; = no significant difference. Country codes: AU = Australia; CH = Switzerland; DK = Denmark; FI = Finland; FR = France; IT = Italy; KR = Republic of Korea; NZ = New Zealand; RS = Republic of Serbia; TN = Tunisia; UK = United Kingdom.
Summary of findings of comparison I (perceptual proprioceptive training versus inactive controls or other exercise)
| Patient or population: adults with non-specific chronic low-back pain; Settings: primary and secondary health care centres | |||||
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| Outcomes | Illustrative means (95% CI) | N (studies) | GRADE | Comments | |
| Control group | Intervention group | ||||
| Comparison 1.1 | Inactive control | pPrT | |||
| Pain intensity VAS (0–10) short-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 50 (1 study) | ++00low2,3,§ | Significant |
| Pain intensity VAS (0–10) long-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 45 (1 study) | ++00low2,3 | Significant |
| Back specific functional status ODI short-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was | The mean ODI score in the intervention group was | 50 (1 study) | ++00low2,3 | Non-significant |
| Back specific functional status ODI long-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was | The mean ODI score in the intervention group was | 45 (1 study) | ++00low1,3 | Non-significant |
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| Pain intensity various scales short-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 80 (2 studies) | 000 + very low2,3,4 | ||
| Pain intensity various scales long-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was | The mean ODI score in the intervention group was | 45 (1 study) | ++00 low2,3,§ | |
| Back specific functional status various scales short-term follow-up | The mean ODI score of the control group was | The mean ODI score in the intervention group was | 50 (1 study) | ++00 low2,3,§ | |
| Back specific functional status various scales long-term follow-up | The mean ODI score of the control group was | The mean ODI score in the intervention group was | 45(1 study) | ++00 low2,3,§ | |
N = total number of patients; CI = Confidence Interval; 1Serious limitations in study design (i.e. >25% of participants from studies with high risk of bias); 2Serious imprecision (i.e. total number of participants <300 for each outcome or only one study available for comparison); 3Indirectness of population (e.g. only one study), intervention (applicability) and outcome measures; 4Serious inconsistency (i.e. significant statistical heterogeneity or opposite direction of effects). §Only one study, consistency cannot be evaluated.
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence.
High quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
Moderate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
Low quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
Summary of findings of comparison II (joint repositioning training (rPrT) versus inactive controls or other exercise)
| Patient or population: adults with non-specific chronic low-back pain; Settings: primary and secondary health care centres | |||||
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| Outcomes | Illustrative means (95% CI) | N (studies) | GRADE | Comments | |
| Control group | Intervention group | ||||
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| Pain intensity VAS (0 to 10) scales short-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity ranged across control groups from | The mean pain intensity in the intervention groups was | 88(2 studies) | +000very low1,2,4 | |
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| Pain intensity Numeric Pain Rating (0–10) short-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was reduced by | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 58(1 study) | ++00 low2,3,§ | |
| Back specific functional status Neck Disability Index (0–50) short-term follow-up | The mean NDI score of the control group was reduced by | The mean NDI score in the intervention group was | 58 (1 study) | ++00 low2,3,§ | |
N = total number of patients; CI = Confidence Interval; 1Serious limitations in study design (i.e. >25% of participants from studies with high risk of bias); 2Serious imprecision (i.e. total number of participants <300 for each outcome or only one study available for comparison); 3Indirectness of population (e.g. only one study), intervention (applicability) and outcome measures; 4Serious inconsistency (i.e. significant statistical heterogeneity or opposite direction of effects). §Only one study, consistency cannot be evaluated.
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence.
High quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
Moderate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
Low quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.
Summary of findings of comparison III (multimodal proprioceptive Training (mPrT) versus inactive controls, educational approach or other exercise)
| Patient or population: adults with non-specific chronic low-back pain; Settings: primary and secondary health care centres | |||||
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| Outcomes | Illustrative means (95% CI) | N (studies) | GRADE | Comments | |
| Control group | Intervention group | ||||
| Comparison 3.1 | Inactive control | mPrT | |||
| Pain intensity various scales short-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 329(4 studies) | +++04moderate | ||
| Pain intensity various scales long-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 247(2 studies) | ++002,4 low | One additional study did not quantify this outcome but reported no difference between groups. | |
| Back specific functional status various scales short-term follow-up | The mean functional status in the intervention group was | 246 (2 studies) | ++002,4 low | One additional study did not quantify this outcome but reported no difference between groups. | |
| Back specific functional status various scales long-term follow-up | The mean functional status in the intervention group was | 246 (2 studies) | +++02 moderate | One additional study did not quantify this outcome but reported no difference between groups. | |
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| Pain intensity various scales short-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 465 (8 studies) | ++002,4 low | ||
| Pain intensity various scales long-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group of one study was | 122 (1 studies) | ++002,4 low | One additional study did not quantify this outcome but reported no difference between groups. |
| Back specific functional status various scales short-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 466 (8 studies) | ++002,4 low | One additional study did not quantify this outcome but reported no difference between groups. | |
| Back specific functional status various scales long-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group of one study was | 107 (1 studies) | ++002,3 low | One additional study did not quantify this outcome but reported no difference between groups. |
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| Pain intensity VAS scales (0–10) short-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 185 (1 study) | ++002,3,§ low | |
| Pain intensity various scales long-term follow-up | The mean pain intensity of the control group was | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 164 (1 study) | ++002,3,§ low | |
| Back specific functional status LBP rating scale short-term follow-up | The mean score on the LBP rating scale of the control group was | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 185 (1 study) | ++002,3,§ low | |
| Back specific functional status LBP rating scale long-term follow-up | The mean score on the LBP rating scale of the control group was | The mean pain intensity in the intervention group was | 164 (1 study) | ++002,3,§ low | |
N = total number of patients; CI = Confidence Interval; 1Serious limitations in study design (i.e. >25% of participants from studies with high risk of bias); 2Serious imprecision (i.e. total number of participants <300 for each outcome or only one study available for comparison); 3Indirectness of population (e.g. only one study), intervention (applicability) and outcome measures; 4Serious inconsistency (i.e. significant statistical heterogeneity or opposite direction of effects). §Only one study, consistency cannot be evaluated.
GRADE Working Group grades of evidence.
High quality: Further research is very unlikely to change our confidence in the estimate of effect.
Moderate quality: Further research is likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and may change the estimate.
Low quality: Further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect and is likely to change the estimate.
Very low quality: We are very uncertain about the estimate.