| Literature DB >> 30666151 |
Carla Galvani1, Paola Caramaschi1, Paolo Mura2, Antonella Paladini3, Alba Piroli3, Elisa Arnaudo4, Lucia De Franceschi5, Maurizio Evangelista6, Alice Pari4, Giovanna Ongaro1, Gabriele Finco2, Anna Ciannameo4, Antonio Carletto1, Giustino Varrassi3,7, Domenico Biasi1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic pain is a key symptom in fibromyalgia (FM), and its management is still challenging for rheumatologists in daily practice. FM patients show psychological and psychiatric manifestations, going from mood and emotional disorders to depression and alexithymia that negatively impact their quality of life, limiting their daily activities. Since pharmacological strategies have a limited efficacy in FM pain, alternative or complementary non-pharmacological approaches have been introduced in the clinical management of FM. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This is a retrospective study on FM patients (n=52) treated with a novel integrated postural counseling (PC) rehabilitation program carried out by a counselor physiotherapist. The clinical impact of PC was evaluated by 1) a semi-structured interview using an ad hoc modified questionnaire McGill Illness Narrative Interview (MINI) 1 to obtain data on pain management by highlighting everyday experience of living with pain and 2) an FM impact questionnaire (FIQ) total score.Entities:
Keywords: NSAIDs; anticonvulsants; fatigue; self-management; sense of self; serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors; tricyclic drugs
Year: 2019 PMID: 30666151 PMCID: PMC6333156 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S164714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Demographic and clinical characteristics of FM patients treated with PC
| Whole sample (n=52) | Broken (n=28) | Cumulative (n=24) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years, mean (SD) | 51.40 (12.65) | 55.64 (11.98) | 46.46 (11.79) | 0.008 |
| Female sex, n (%) | 47 (90.38) | 26 (92.85) | 21 (87.5) | 0.6 |
| BMI, kg/m2 (SD) | 22.65 (2.84) | 23.04 (2.95) | 22.21 (2.70) | 0.3 |
| Duration of pain years, median (IQR) | 3.5 (2–8.25) | 3.5 (2–10) | 3.5 (2–7.5) | 0.7 |
| Tender point count, n (IQR) | 17 (15–18) | 16.5 (15–18) | 17 (15–18) | 0.7 |
| University or higher education, n (%) | 16 (30.77) | 7 (25.00) | 9 (37.50) | 0.4 |
| Working full-time | 22 (42.31) | 8 (28.57) | 14 (58.33) | 0.04 |
| Working part-time | 11 (21.15) | 6 (21.43) | 5 (20.83) | |
| Disability pension | 2 (3.85) | 2 (7.14) | 0 (0) | |
| Unemployed | 2 (3.85) | 0 (0) | 2 (8.33) | |
| At home | 15 (28.85) | 12 (42.86) | 3 (12.5) | |
| No medical therapy | 17 (32.69) | 11 (39.29) | 6 (25.00) | 0.4 |
| Weak opioids and congeners | 18 (34.62) | 8 (28.57) | 10 (41.67) | 0.4 |
| NSAIDs | 23 (44.23) | 11 (39.29) | 12 (50.00) | 0.6 |
| Strong opioids | 5 (9.61) | 1 (3.57) | 4 (16.67) | 0.2 |
| Antidepressants or anticonvulsants | 21 (40.38) | 11 (39.29) | 10 (41.67) | 0.9 |
Note:
Working (full-time plus part-time) vs not working.
Abbreviations: BMI, body max index; FM, fibromyalgia; IQR, interquartile range; NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; PC, postural counseling.
Figure 1Tree diagram of the study involving pts with FM treated with integrated PC.
Abbreviations: FM, fibromyalgia; PC, postural counseling; pts, patients.
Narrative pattern of FM patients’ life story collected during PC
| Descriptive summary and quotations | ||
|---|---|---|
| Cumulative life pattern (46.1% of FM patients) | Broken life pattern (53.9% of FM patients) | |
| Life before illness | Low self-confidence with difficulties in solving daily problems, overwhelming fatigue frequently beyond control, domestic hassles (ie, parent’s illness). | Dramatic and traumatic events (ie, mental or physical violence, death of a son). |
| Perceived cause(s) of symptoms | Chronic fatigues, unhappiness and depression, distress. | Fear, traumas, tension, depression. |
| Metaphor of rehabilitation course | Self-discovery and listening time. | Turning point to talk about painful events, to gain self-consciousness and to escape from distress. |
Notes: The names shown in the table do not refer to patients’ real names. Patient interviews were conducted in Italian. The translation to English was done by a professional translator for the manuscript preparation.
Abbreviations: FM, fibromyalgia; PC, postural counseling.
FM patients’ quotations during semi-structured interview after PC
| 1. PC program as patient- centered and integrated approach | 1. “[the doctor] listens, she wants to understand the cause of the suffering, deeply. Having someone treating you like a person, for a patient, it is really important.” |
| 2. “The difference [from other services] is that she does listen to me… because she tries to understand the origin of my distress.” | |
| 3. “[She taught me] that you have to accept the situation… and live it in a different way.” | |
| 4. “Talking is useful too… it’s a way to disclose things…[…] this can also help [with] making you feel the pain you have less.” | |
| 5. “In the beginning, the awareness of your own body is fundamental: listen to it, breathing, and then feeling the painful areas.” | |
| 6. “What is important is that it is not just giving exercises to do… there is dialogue, discussion and sharing of the troubled issues. This is innovative.” | |
| 2. Improvements in pain management | 1. “I have done everything to block these pains, but nothing worked. Now I feel good, I still have the pain but it is not like before, now it is acceptable. There is less pain, it is less strong.” |
| 2. “Now I still have pain, but I can deal with it.” | |
| 3. “After the first consults, I felt better but it lasted for few days; then any time I felt less pain. I feel good now, the pain is still there but it is manageable. For me, now I am fine.” | |
| 4. “Pain changed, it has improved. Before I could not do anything. I always tell [the doctor]: it gives me the impression to be healed.” | |
| 5. “Now I trust again in the possibility to re-dimension the pain, the associated mood. Now I have a small hope again.” | |
| 3. Empowerment/resuming previously left activities | 1. “I could not even drive a car anymore. Now I can do it again.” |
| 2. “I didn’t go to church to sing in the chorus anymore because I felt too uncomfortable to sing and even to speak. Now, when I feel like that, I use the breathing exercises [PC counselor] taught me. Now I have started doing my activities that I stoppped because of the pain.” | |
| 3. “[Now] I feel less rigid; before [the PC] there were movements I could not do at all, while now I’m capable again.” | |
| 4. “My life is completely changed: now I am not afraid anymore to go on holiday for a week.” | |
| 5. “[After the PC] I started waking up from bed and then I came back to part-time work.” | |
| 4. Improvements in one’s perception of their own condition health | 1. “Now I don’t feel sick anymore… only activity is needed… knowing that with the rehabilitation you can recover, it does change your attitude a lot, it is much more positive now.” |
| 2. “I improved with PC… now, I am able to get out… before I was trapped at home.” | |
| 5. Integrated management of pain | 1. “There is pain but it is another pain. Physical pain is different. Talking about it, it is already less painful.” |
| 2. “Now, the pain has improved. Before, I just wanted someone to switch me off. Now it is not like before. Now I can deal with it, psychologically also.” |
Note: Patient interviews were conducted in Italian. The translation to English was done by a professional translator for the manuscript preparation.
Abbreviations: FM, fibromyalgia; PC, postural counseling.
Figure 2Histogram depicting individual variations on FIQ score in FM patients who completed the study protocol.
Note: FIQ was collected before and after PC program.
Abbreviations: FIQ, FM impact questionnaire; FM, fibromyalgia; PC, postural counseling.
Figure 3A clinical model of care in FM patients based on PC program outcomes.
Notes: The clinical care in FM should take into account the contextual factor as well as societal and individual perspective in designing a rehabilitation program such as a PC program. This successfully impacts both individual perspective of FM and the ability of patients to deal with FM symptoms, such as pain and fatigue daily.
Abbreviations: FM, fibromyalgia; PC, postural counseling.
| 1. We would like to know more about your current health status. How are you? |
| 2. How have you been involved in this service? |
| 3. Did you avoid before doing something because of persistent pain? If yes, could you tell me about it? |
| 4. Tell me more about your experience with the service |
| 5. How and when did you come to these consults? |
| 6. For how long has your PC treatment last? |
| 7. Have you learnt new practices? |
| 8. Have these been beneficial? |
| 9. Are there any practices that you have autonomously conducted? |
| 10. Do you think that these have been beneficial in the everyday dealing with your pain? |
| 11. Have you changed something in your everyday life in order to practice these exercises? |
| 12. Have you noticed any change concerning intensity, localization, frequency of your pain after the treatment? |
| 13. Have you resumed any activity previously left? |
| 14. Have you been able to do all the exercises proposed by the physiotherapists? |
| 15. How many and which drugs did you take before starting your PC treatment? If your PC treatment is over, do you still exercise? If not, why? |
Note: Patient interviews were conducted in Italian. The translation to English was done by a professional translator for the manuscript preparation.
Abbreviations: FM, fibromyalgia; PC, postural counseling.