| Literature DB >> 33884116 |
Charlotte C M Van Laake-Geelen1,2, Rob J E M Smeets2,3, Thijs Van Meulenbroek1,2, Marlies Den Hollander1,2, Marielle E J B Goossens2,4, Jeanine A Verbunt1,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Painful diabetic neuropathy is associated with low quality of life, depression and anxiety. Patients are limited in their performance of activities of daily living due to fears related to their condition. Treatment modalities are needed to help patients cope with their pain and pain-related disability. Exposure in vivo is an effective treatment in other chronic pain syndromes, increasing patients' functional ability and quality of life. This paper presents an Exposure in vivo treatment protocol for patients with painful diabetic neuropathy. PROTOCOL: An 8-week Exposure in vivo treatment protocol was specifically adapted to the needs and risks of patients with painful diabetic neuropathy. New screening tools were developed for patients with PDN; the Painful Diabetic Neuropathy Anxiety Rasch-Transformed Questionnaire (PART-Q30) identifies specific fears related to painful diabetic neuropathy (e.g. fear of hypoglycaemia); and a customized version of the Photograph-series Of Daily Activities (PHODA-PDN) detects fear-eliciting activities related to the condition in individual patients. During Exposure in vivo, catastrophic interpretations regarding painful stimuli are challenged and corrected, thereby diminishing pain-related fear and enabling the patient to re-engage in activities of daily living. An interdisciplinary team provides Exposure in vivo in 1-h sessions twice a week. DISCUSSION: To the best of our knowledge, this treatment protocol is the first intervention using Exposure in vivo specifically adapted to the needs and risks of patients with painful diabetic neuropathy. Journal CompilationEntities:
Keywords: diabetic neuropathies; physical and rehabilitation medicine; quality of life
Year: 2019 PMID: 33884116 PMCID: PMC8008735 DOI: 10.2340/20030711-1000015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Rehabil Med Clin Commun ISSN: 2003-0711
Schematic overview of the exposure in vivo treatment protocol for patients with painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN)
| Medical consultation including physical examination | Rehabilitation physician |
|---|---|
| Screening | |
| · Physical examination | Physical therapist |
| · Behavioural analyses | Psychologist and physical therapist |
| · Goal identification (COPM) | Occupational therapist |
| · Graded hierarchies (PHODA-PDN) | Psychologist therapist |
| · Medical education about PDN | Rehabilitation physician |
| · Education about chronic pain | Rehabilitation physician, psychologist and physical therapist |
| Treatment | |
| 8 weeks; 1-h sessions, twice a week | All members of treatment team |
| Team meetings | |
| In week 3 and 7 | All members of treatment team |
| Final consultation | Rehabilitation physician |
| Aftercare | |
| After 6 weeks and 3 months | Rehabilitation physician |
PDN: painful diabetic neuropathy; COPM: Canadian Occupational Performance Measure; PHODA-PDN: Photograph-series Of Daily Activities-PDN.
Eligibility criteria for exposure in vivo treatment
| Patients experience PDN-related fears that limit them in activities of daily living. |
| The patient has relevant treatment goals aimed on participation in daily life. |
| The patient is committed and motivated to undergo the 8-week treatment programme. |
| There are no medical or psychological restrictions to participate (e.g. pressure ulcers, high risks of injury, comorbid severe depression). |
PDN: painful diabetic neuropathy.
Topics that should be discussed during the medical education session
| Aetiology and consequences of diabetes, amongst which DN |
| Aetiology of diabetes and its complications, such as retinopathy, neuropathy, ulcers, risk for amputation. |
| Discuss why adequate glycaemic control is so important. |
| Aetiology of DN: explain nerve damage and sensory loss; discuss the results of previously performed medical examinations (e.g. EMG). |
| Pain in PDN |
| Aetiology of PDN: nerve damage leads to continuous firing of pain signals. |
| Discuss acute vs chronic pain; chronic pain in a damaged nerve is not necessarily a warning sign. |
| Discuss pain medication: it is not always effective and can have many side-effects. |
| Physical activity |
| Stress the beneficial effects of physical activity on glycaemic control and the reduction of risks for development of secondary complications. |
| Elaborate on any potential misconceptions regarding limitations and/or risks of physical activity in PDN. |
DN: diabetic neuropathy; EMG: electromyography; PDN: painful diabetic neuropathy.