| Literature DB >> 28596288 |
Benjamin E Smith1,2, Paul Hendrick3, Toby O Smith4, Marcus Bateman1, Fiona Moffatt3, Michael S Rathleff5,6, James Selfe7, Pip Logan2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic musculoskeletal disorders are a prevalent and costly global health issue. A new form of exercise therapy focused on loading and resistance programmes that temporarily aggravates a patient's pain has been proposed. The object of this review was to compare the effect of exercises where pain is allowed/encouraged compared with non-painful exercises on pain, function or disability in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain within randomised controlled trials.Entities:
Keywords: Meta-analysis; Systematic review; effectiveness; exercise; musculoskeletal disorder; musculoskeletal pain; treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28596288 PMCID: PMC5739826 DOI: 10.1136/bjsports-2016-097383
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Sports Med ISSN: 0306-3674 Impact factor: 13.800
Search strategy
| 1 | Randomised controlled trials as |
| 2 | Topic/ |
| 3 | randomised controlled trial.pt |
| 4 | controlled clinical trial.pt |
| 5 | or/1-3 |
| 6 | Exp Pain |
| 7 | Exp Musculoskeletal Disease |
| 8 | Exp Musculoskeletal Pain |
| 9 | Or/5-7 |
| 10 | Rehabilitation |
| 11 | Bone |
| 12 | Joint |
| 13 | Muscle |
| 14 | Exp Exercise therapy |
| 15 | Physiotherapy |
| 16 | Physical therapy |
| 17 | Physical-therapy |
| 18 | Exp Exercise Or/9-17 |
| 19 | (exercise adj7 pain$).af |
| 20 | High load |
| 21 | Loaded$ |
| 22 | Resistance$ |
| 23 | Eccentric$ |
| 24 | Concentric$ |
| 25 | Weight loaded |
| 26 | Weight-loaded |
| 27 | Weight resistance |
| 28 | Weight-resistance |
| 29 | High-load |
| 30 | Heavy load |
| 31 | Heavy-load |
| 32 | Direction$ preference |
| 33 | Directional-preference |
| 34 | Or/19-33 |
| 35 | 4 and 8 and 18 and 34 (limited to English) |
Figure 1PRISMA 2009 flow diagram.
Characteristics of included trials
| Aasa | 70 patients recruited from occupational healthcare services in Sweden (mean age 42, 56% female); | Physiotherapy clinic, sports centre and home setting | Main outcome assessed at baseline, 2-month and 12-month follow-up was 7 day average pain on a Visual Analogue Scale (0–100 mm) and Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire (0–24) |
| Holmgren | 97 patients recruited from the waiting list for an arthroscopic subacromial decompression from a university hospital in Sweden (mean age 52, 37% female); | Physiotherapy and home setting | Main outcome of Constant-Murley score (C-M) (0–100), along with shoulder assessment scores and pain scores taken at baseline, 3 months and 12 months, including pain at rest measured on Visual Analogue Scale (0–100 mm) |
| Littlewood | 86 patients recruited from UK, NHS physiotherapy waiting list (mean age 55, 50% female); | Physiotherapy and home setting | Main outcome of the Shoulder Pain and Disability Index (SPADI) (0–100) at baseline, 3, 6 and 12 months |
| Maenhout | 61 patients recruited from a shoulder surgeon’s clinic in Belgium (mean age 39.8, 41% female); | Physiotherapy and home setting | Main outcome of the SPADI (0–100) at baseline, 6 weeks and 12 weeks |
| Nørregaard | 45 patients recruited from a clinic of sports medicine in Denmark (mean age 42, 49% female); | Sports medicine clinic and home setting | Outcome measures were tenderness on palpation, ultrasound and pain, as measured by the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) (0–4) and patient’s global assessment; follow-up was at baseline, 3, 6, 9, 12 weeks and 1 year |
| Rathleff | 48 patients recruited from a university hospital, regional hospital and private clinic in Denmark (mean age 46, 66% female); | Home based exercises | Primary outcome was Foot Function Index at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months, including pain at worse and pain on first step on a numerical rating scale (0–10). |
| Silbernagel | 40 patients recruited from mailings to hospitals, clinics and sports clubs in Sweden (mean age 45, 23% female); inclusion criteria included (a) adults with Achilles pain >3 months | Clinic and home setting | Outcomes of pain on palpation (Visual Analogue Scale) (0–100 mm) taken at baseline, 6 weeks, 3 and 6 months. Other outcomes included pain on walking and pain on stairs (yes/no), various objective measures, plus a non-validated functional questionnaire |
*Information not within publication, authors contacted for clarification.
ROM, range of motion.
Figure 2Risk of bias summary.
Figure 3Risk of bias graph.
Figure 4Forest plot of exercises into pain versus pain-free exercises—short term. Negative values favour painful intervention, whereas positive favour pain-free.
GRADE summary of findings table
| Short term | 385 (6 trials) | −0.28 (−0.49 to −0.08) | Limitations* | No inconsistency | No indirectness | Imprecision† | |
| Medium term | 173 (3 trials) | −0.59 (−1.03 to −0.15) | Limitations* | No inconsistency | No indirectness | Imprecision† | |
| Long term | 345 (5 trials) | 0.01 (−0.39 to 0.41) | Limitations* | Inconsistency‡ | No indirectness | Imprecision† | |
| Short term | 215 (3 trials) | −0.27 (−0.54 to −0.05) | No limitations | No inconsistency | No indirectness | Imprecision† | |
| Medium term | 40 (1 trials) | −0.32 (−0.95 to 0.31) | No limitations | Inconsistency§ | No indirectness | Imprecision† | |
| Long term | 215 (3 trials) | 0.13 (−0.14 to 0.40) | No limitations | No inconsistency | No indirectness | Imprecision† | |
*Lack of blinding of participants and personnel, attrition bias, unable to adequately assess selection bias risk.
†<400 participants for each outcome.
‡Large statistical heterogeneity; I2=70%.
§Only single trial available, <400 participants therefore downgraded for inconsistency and imprecision.
Short term, ≤3 months; medium term, >3 and <12 months; long term, ≥12 months.
High quality: further research is 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.
Low quality: further research is very likely to have an important impact on our confidence in the estimate of effect.
Very low quality: we are uncertain about the estimate.
GRADE, Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation; SMD, standardised mean difference.
Figure 5Forest plot of exercises into pain versus pain-free exercises—medium term. Negative values favour painful intervention, whereas positive favour pain-free.
Figure 6Forest plot of exercises into pain versus pain-free exercises—long term. Negative values favour painful intervention, whereas positive favour pain-free. AMED, Allied and Complimentary Medicine Database; CINAHL, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature.