| Literature DB >> 32547176 |
Floriane Rousseaux1,2,3, Aminata Bicego1,2,3, Didier Ledoux3,4, Paul Massion4, Anne-Sophie Nyssen1,3, Marie-Elisabeth Faymonville2, Steven Laureys5, Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse2,3.
Abstract
Hypnosis is well documented in the literature in the management of acute and chronic pain. Virtual reality (VR) is currently gaining credibility in the same fields as hypnosis for medical applications. Lately, the combination of hypnosis and VR was considered. The aim of this scoping review is to understand the current studied contexts and effects of virtual reality hypnosis (VRH) for the management of pain. We searched on PubMed, Taylor & Francis Online, and ProQuest databases with the following terms: "virtual reality," "3D," "hypnosis," and "pain". We included 8 studies that combined hypnosis and VR. All articles are in English. Two included healthy volunteers and six are clinical studies. Short-term results indicated significant decreases in pain intensity, pain unpleasantness, time spent thinking about pain, anxiety, and levels of opioids. However, results are not consistent for all patients all the days. VR alone seems to reduce pain independently of the hypnotizability level. One study claimed that VR and hypnosis could alter each other's effects and another argued that VR did not inhibit the hypnotic process and may even facilitate it by employing visual imagery. We cannot affirm that VR added value to hypnosis when they are combined. These trials and case series gave us indications about the possible applications of VRH in different contexts. Additional randomized clinical trials on VRH in the future will have to test this technique in clinical practice and help define guidelines for VRH utilization in pain management.Entities:
Keywords: 3D animation; acute pain; chronic pain; hypnosis; virtual reality; virtual reality hypnosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32547176 PMCID: PMC7247604 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S231737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Figure 1Flowchart of articles inclusion and exclusion.
Outcomes and Results of Studies Using Virtual Reality and Hypnosis for Pain Management
| Authors | Design | Interventions | Outcomes | Results | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patterson et al (2004) | Case report | 1 VRH session (16 minutes) prior to wound care on day 1 and hypnosis alone on day 2. | Absorption (TAS), | Worst pain: 40% drop after VRH on day 1 and 60% drop on day 2 after hypnosis audio compared to baseline. On day 3, pain levels returned to baseline ratings. | Hypnotizability: medium score (3/5). Absorption: moderate score (18/34). Time spent thinking about pain decreased from 20% on day 2 and increased on day 3. Anxiety decreased from 50% with VRH and 60% with hypnosis audio. Levels of opioids decreased at day 1 and day 2 and increased at day 3. |
| Patterson et al (2006) | Prospective randomized | Pain stimulation then sounds of nature (25 minutes) then pain stimulation (control group, n=26); OR pain stimulation then hypnosis tape (25 minutes) then pain stimulation (hypnosis group, n=25); OR pain stimulation then sounds of nature (25 minutes) then pain stimulation during VR session (VR group, n=26); OR pain stimulation then hypnosis session (25 minutes) then pain stimulation during VR session (VRH group, n=26). | Amount of fun during procedures (GRS), hypnotizability (SCHCS), pain unpleasantness (GRS), time spent thinking about pain (5 levels scale), worst pain (GRS). | All three treatments reduced pain significantly more than the control group. VR reduced pain for all subjects independently of hypnotizability although hypnosis analgesia was influenced by hypnotizability. VRH reduced worst pain 22% more than VR but this pattern is non-significant. | VRH reduced pain unpleasantness 25% more than VR did but this result is non-significant. High hypnotizables reported a larger decrease in time spent thinking about pain (M=4.28; SD=2.22) compared to medium (M=2.72; SD=2.65) and low hypnotizables (M=2.41; SD=2.34) independently of the treatment condition. |
| Patterson et al (2006) | Case series | Wound care baseline on day 1 and VRH session (16 minutes) prior to wound care on days 2 and 3. | Absorption (TAS), anxiety (BSPAS), hypnotizability (SCHCS), levels of opioids, time spent thinking about pain (GRS), unpleasantness of pain (GRS), worst pain (GRS). | All pain scores decreased from baseline to day 3. Worst pain: 20% drop on day 3. | Absorption: medium. Hypnotizability: moderate. Pain unpleasantness: 11% drop. Time spent thinking about pain: 29% drop. Anxiety: 26% drop. Opioids: 50% drop in the amount of opioids required before, during, and immediately following wound care. |
| Oneal et al (2008) | Case report | 10 hypnosis test sessions followed by 10 VRH test sessions then 33 VRH sessions in 6 months and self-hypnosis between sessions with an audiotape. Then 1 month follow-up. | Average pain intensity (NRS), hours of absence of pain, hypnotizability (SHCS), pain unpleasantness (NRS). | Pain intensity: 36% drop after 6 months. | Hypnotizability: low to moderate. Pain unpleasantness: 33% drop after 6 months. Mean hours of pain reduction: 12.21 hours. Mean hours of pain absence: 8.50 hours. No changes in pain intensity and unpleasantness of pain at one month follow-up compared to baseline. |
| Patterson et al (2010) | Prospective randomized | Hypnosis during VR (40 minutes) (n=11); OR distractive VR and control group combined (n=9). | Average pain intensity over the past 8 hours (GRS), current pain intensity (GRS), minimum pain felt over the past 8h (GRS), pain unpleasantness (GRS). | VRH significantly decreased current pain intensity post treatment (M=38.33, SD= 28.63) compared to the control group (M=47.78, SD=25.75). | Pain unpleasantness (M=35.83, SD=30.88) was reduced compared to the control group (M=51.11, SD=33.05). There is no difference in average pain over the past 8 hours between the two groups. However, there is a significant difference for minimum pain felt in VRH (M=13.33, SD=20.15) compared to the control group (M=35, SD=33.91). |
| Soltani et al (2012) | Case report | 2 VRH sessions (30 minutes) in 2 days. | Anxiety (GRS), pain unpleasantness (GRS), time spent thinking about pain (GRS), worst pain (GRS). | There is a decrease in all pain variables. Worst pain: 40% drop on day 1, 62% on day 2. | Pain unpleasantness: 56% drop on day 1, 40% on day 2. Time spent thinking about pain: 67% drop from baseline to post VRH session on day 1 and 83% from pre to post VRH on day 2. Anxiety: 50% drop on day 1, 100% on day 2. |
| Teeley et al (2012) | Case series | 2 VRH sessions in 2 days. | Anxiety (GRS), levels of opioids, pain unpleasantness (GRS), time spent thinking about pain (GRS), worst pain intensity (GRS). | Decreases in pain are not consistent for all patients on all days. Worst pain decreased from 60% to 85% for 2 patients on day 1 but did not change for one patient. On day 2, pain decreased for one patient (44%) and did not change for the two others. | Pain unpleasantness decreased from 45% to 86% for 2 patients and did not change for one patient. On day 2, it increased for one patient. Time spent thinking about pain decreased from 40% to 77%. Reduction of anxiety is about 100% for all patients. Daily opioids use remained constant all the days. |
| Enea et al (2014) | Prospective randomized | 3 sessions in 3 days of relaxing music (control group, n=30) or audio hypnosis (hypnosis group, n=30) or VR (VR group, n=30) or hypnosis then VR (VRH group, n=30) during a painful stimulus. | Hypnotizability (HGSHS Form A), | High hypnotizable subjects (n=60): significantly more pain intensity post treatment for control (M=13.19, SD= 7.17) and VR group (M=9.78, SD=3.91) than hypnosis (M=4.95, SD=3.13) and VRH (M=7.74, SD=4.17). Low hypnotizable subjects (n=60): significantly more pain intensity for control (M=14.44, SD=2.84) and hypnosis (M=11.20, SD=7.06) than VR (M=7.26, SD= 4.53) and VRH (M=8.26, SD=5.67). | Post treatment pain unpleasantness is significantly higher in control and VR group than in hypnosis and VRH group for high hypnotizable subjects. Emotional involvement and sense of presence factors are higher in VRH condition than in VR independent of hypnotizability. VRH is not better than VR for alleviating pain. |
Abbreviations: BSPAS, Burn Specific Pain Anxiety Scale; GRS, Graphic Rating Scale; HGSHS Form A, Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Susceptibility; NRS, Numeric Rating Scale; PRJQ, Presence and Reality Judgement Questionnaire; SCHCS, Stanford Hypnotic Clinical Scale; TAS, Tellegen Absorption Scale; VDS, Verbal Descriptor Scale.