| Literature DB >> 31443149 |
Michele Sterling1,2,3, Rutger M J de Zoete4,5, Iris Coppieters6,7, Scott F Farrell4,5,8.
Abstract
Neck pain, whether from a traumatic event such as a motor vehicle crash or of a non-traumatic nature, is a leading cause of worldwide disability. This narrative review evaluated the evidence from systematic reviews, recent randomised controlled trials, clinical practice guidelines, and other relevant studies for the effects of rehabilitation approaches for chronic neck pain. Rehabilitation was defined as the aim to restore a person to health or normal life through training and therapy and as such, passive interventions applied in isolation were not considered. The results of this review found that the strongest treatment effects to date are those associated with exercise. Strengthening exercises of the neck and upper quadrant have a moderate effect on neck pain in the short-term. The evidence was of moderate quality at best, indicating that future research will likely change these conclusions. Lower quality evidence and smaller effects were found for other exercise approaches. Other treatments, including education/advice and psychological treatment, showed only very small to small effects, based on low to moderate quality evidence. The review also provided suggestions for promising future directions for clinical practice and research.Entities:
Keywords: exercise; neck pain; psychology review; rehabilitation
Year: 2019 PMID: 31443149 PMCID: PMC6723111 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8081219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Best evidence summary—systematic reviews and RCTs if conducted after publication of a relevant systematic review.
| Intervention | Target Population | Level of Evidence | Quality of Evidence | Effect Size | Site of Care | Rehabilitation Professions | Key References and/or Treatment Manuals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reassurance, advice, education | |||||||
| Video in ED focussing on activation | WAD | Level I [ | Moderate | Small effect compared to no treatment at intermediate follow-up, RR 0.79 (0.59 to 1.06), NNT:23 | ED | All | See systematic review |
| WAD information pamphlet | WAD | Level I [ | Low | No effect compared to generic advice | ED | All | See systematic review |
| Booklet or email | NTNP | Level 1 [ | Moderate | No effect compared to massage or exercise | Primary | All | See systematic review |
| Booklet/neck school | NTNP | Level 1 [ | Very low to low | No effect | Primary and secondary | All | |
| Exercise | |||||||
| Strengthening (upper quarter) | WAD and NTNP | Level I [ | Moderate | Moderate to large at short-term follow-up, SMD (pain) −0.71 (−1.33 to −0.10) | Primary and secondary | Exercise professionals | See systematic review |
| Office workers with neck pain | Level I [ | Moderate | Moderate effect vs. no intervention, SMD pain = 0.59 (0.29 to 0.89) | Workplace | |||
| Endurance training (upper quarter) | WAD and NTNP | Level I [ | Moderate | Small at short-term follow-up | Primary and secondary | Physiotherapists | See systematic review |
| Muscle control (stabilisation) | WAD and NTNP | Level I [ | Moderate | Small at intermediate-term follow-up | Primary and secondary | Physiotherapists | See systematic review |
| NTNP | Level 1 [ | Low to moderate | Small effect on disability (SMD disability −0.44 (95% CI: −0.81 to −0.08)) vs. other treatments | Primary and secondary | Physiotherapists | ||
| Stretching (neck & shoulder) | Workers | Level II [ | Pedro (8/10) | Small effect on pain & disability compared to ergonomic advice (−1.4; 95% CI −2.2 to −0.7 for pain; −4.8; 95% CI −9.3 to −0.4 for disability) | Work place | Exercise professionals | Exercise protocol available at [ |
| Eye-neck co-ordination/proprioception | WAD & NTNP | Level I [ | Very low | Small effect on pain MD: −1.6 (−3.6 to 0.3) compared to no exercise | Primary and Secondary | Physiotherapists | See systematic review |
| Qigong | WAD and NTNP | Level I [ | Moderate | Small at intermediate-term follow-up | Primary and secondary | Exercise professionals | See systematic review |
| Yoga | NTNP | Level I * (high heterogeneity) [ | Moderate | Moderate effect on pain and disability vs. various other treatments including exercise, SMD pain = −1.13 (−1.60 to −0.66), SMD disability −0.92 (−1.38 to 0.47) | Primary and secondary | Exercise professionals | See systematic review |
| General exercise | WAD, NTNP, workers | Level I [ | No effect | Primary and secondary | Exercise professionals | See systematic review | |
| Psychological treatments alone (CBT) | WAD and NTNP | Level I [ | Very low to moderate | Small effect on pain and disability when compared to no treatment, SMD pain = −0.58 (−1.01 to −0.16), SMD disability = −0.61 (−1.21 to −0.01) | Primary and secondary | Psychology professionals | See systematic review |
| Combined psychological and physical treatments delivered by physiotherapists | WAD | Level I * (high heterogeneity) [ | Moderate quality | No effect on pain and disability | Primary | Physiotherapists | See systematic review |
| Medium effect on fear of avoidance | |||||||
| Acute WAD | Level II (RCT) [ | NA | Medium to large effect on pain related disability compared to exercise only | Physiotherapists | Treatment protocols available at [ | ||
| Exercise and manual therapy | WAD and NTNP | Level I [ | No effect compared to exercise alone | Primary and secondary |
Levels of Evidence were defined as per the Oxford Centre for Evidence Based Medicine [23]. Quality of Evidence as per reported in Systematic reviews or per Pedro scale for RCTs. * Indicates systematic reviews with high heterogeneity indicating caution is required with interpretation of results. WAD: whiplash associated disorders; NTNP: non-traumatic neck pain; ED: emergency department; SMD: standardised mean difference; MD: mean difference; NNT: number needed to treat.
Promising directions for clinical practice.
| Treatment Approach | Resources |
|---|---|
| Risk screening/stratification of patients to determine risk of poor or delayed recovery |
WhipPredict (Whiplash Clinical Prediction Tool) [ Hard copy available on author request Orebro Musculoskeletal Screening Tool Short-Form [ StartMSK [ |
| Clinical pathways of care based on risk stratification |
Under evaluation. Protocol available at [ |
| Development of skills of rehabilitation professionals to integrate some psychological treatments into standard physical rehabilitation |
There are various protocols available but few that are specific to neck pain The integration of a psychological treatment targeting stress related symptoms in people with acute WAD is available at the following reference [ |
| Provide advice and reassurance to patients that is more targeted to their needs |
Preliminary findings of the needs of patients with WAD and neck pain [ |