The journal of pain : official journal of the American Pain Society
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Yoga for chronic neck pain: a pilot randomized controlled clinical trial.
Yoga has been found effective in the treatment of chronic low back pain. We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of Iyengar yoga in chronic neck pain by means of a randomized clinical trial. Seventy-seven patients (aged 47.9 ± 7.9, 67 female) with chronic neck pain who scored >40 mm on a 100-mm visual analog scale (VAS) were randomized to a 9-week Iyengar yoga program with weekly 90-minute classes (n = 38) or to a self-care/exercise program (n = 38). Patients were examined at baseline and after 4 and 10 weeks. The primary outcome measure was change of mean pain at rest (VAS) from baseline to week 10. Secondary outcomes included pain at motion, functional disability, quality of life (QOL), and psychological outcomes. Twelve patients in the yoga group and 11 patients in the self-care/exercise group were lost to follow-up, with higher study nonadherence in the self-care group (5 versus 10 patients). Mean pain at rest was reduced from 44.3 ± 20.1 to 13.0 ± 11.6 at week 10 by yoga and from 41.9 ± 21.9 to 34.4 ± 21.1 by self-care/exercise (group difference: -20.1, 95% confidence interval: -30.0, -10.1; P < .001). Pain at motion was reduced from 53.4 ± 18.5 to 22.4 ± 18.7 at week 10 by yoga and from 49.4 ± 22.8 to 39.9 ± 21.5 by self-care/exercise (group difference: -18.7, 95% confidence interval: -29.3, -8.1; P < .001). Significant treatment effects of yoga were also found for pain-related apprehension, disability, QOL, and psychological outcomes. Sensitivity analyses suggested minimal influence of dropout rates. Both programs were well tolerated. In this preliminary trial, yoga appears to be an effective treatment in chronic neck pain with possible additional effects on psychological well-being and QOL. The effectiveness of yoga in chronic neck pain should be further tested by comparative effectiveness studies with longer observation periods. ⋯ This article presents the results of a randomized controlled trial on the clinical effects of a 9-week yoga program or self-care exercise in patients with chronic neck pain. Yoga led to superior pain relief and functional improvements and might be a useful treatment option for chronic neck pain.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Viscerosomatic facilitation in a subset of IBS patients, an effect mediated by N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors.
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal disorder in which the pathophysiological mechanisms of the pain and hypersensitivity are incompletely understood. IBS patients frequently complain of pain in body regions somatotopically distinct from the gut, suggesting involvement of central hyperalgesic mechanisms. We tested the role of tonic peripheral impulse input by using both repetitive thermal stimuli to the leg and repetitive stimuli to the rectum. Changes in thermal/visceral pain sensitivity after nociceptive thermal/visceral repetitive stimulation were determined. A subset of IBS patients showed enhanced rectal/thermal pain sensitivity after repetitive thermal/rectal stimulation, respectively. IBS patients then received 60 mg dextromethorphan and placebo (diphenhydramine) in a randomized, double-blind, crossover trial. The results showed that 1) a subset of IBS patients had increased visceral/cutaneous hypersensitivity following a series of repetitive nociceptive stimuli and that 2) this increased pain sensitivity was blocked by administration of dextromethorphan. This is the first human study indicating that repetitive stimulation enhances a bidirectional mechanism of secondary hyperalgesia due to viscerosomatic facilitation in IBS patients. These unique findings elucidate mechanisms of somatic hypersensitivity in IBS patients and support an etiologic basis for abnormal N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor mechanisms that may be the target of future therapies for IBS. ⋯ Repetitive stimulation enhances a bidirectional mechanism of secondary hyperalgesia due to viscerosomatic convergence in IBS patients. The findings elucidate unique mechanisms of somatic/visceral hypersensitivity in a subset of IBS patients and further support an etiologic basis for abnormal N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor mechanisms that may be future targets of therapies for IBS.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Comparative responsiveness of pain measures in cancer patients.
Brief measures to assess and monitor pain in cancer patients are available, but few head-to-head psychometric comparisons of different measures have been reported. Baseline and 3-month data were analyzed from 274 patients enrolled in the Indiana Cancer Pain and Depression (INCPAD) trial. Participants completed the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), the PEG (a 3-item abbreviated version of the BPI), the short form (SF)-36 pain scale, and a pain global rating of change measure. The global rating was used as the criterion for standardized response mean and receiver operating characteristic curve analyses. To assess responsiveness to the trial intervention, we evaluated standardized effect size statistics stratified by trial arm. All measures were responsive to global improvement, discriminated between participants with and without improvement, and detected a significant intervention treatment effect. Short and longer measures were similarly responsive. Also, composite measures that combined pain severity and interference into a single score (BPI total, PEG, SF-36 pain) performed comparably to separate measures of each domain (BPI severity and BPI interference). ⋯ Pain measures as brief as 2 or 3 items that provide a single score are responsive in patients with cancer-related pain. Ultra-brief measures offer a valid and efficient means of assessing and monitoring pain for the clinical management as well as research of cancer-related pain.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Tanezumab reduces osteoarthritic knee pain: results of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase III trial.
The objective of this study was to compare the analgesic efficacy of tanezumab versus placebo in patients with osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee. This was a 32-week, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase III trial (NCT00733902). The patient criteria included diagnosis of OA; Western Ontario and McMaster Universities OA Index (WOMAC) Pain and Physical Function subscale scores of ≥5 and ≥4, respectively; Patient's Global Assessment of Osteoarthritis (PGA) ≥3; and failure of nonopiate pain medications or candidacy for invasive interventions. Patients received 3 intravenous doses of tanezumab (2.5, 5, or 10 mg) or placebo. The co-primary efficacy end points were changes in WOMAC subscales and PGA at week 16. Adverse events were monitored throughout. Overall, 690 patients (61% female) were randomized and treated. Those treated with tanezumab showed significant improvement in the 3 co-primary end points (P ≤ .015 for all). The incidence of adverse events was 55 to 60% for tanezumab-treated patients versus 48% for placebo-treated patients. Joint replacement was reported in 4 patients, 1 in each treatment group; a total of 5 joints were replaced (1 index knee and 4 hips). The tanezumab OA clinical program is currently on clinical hold due to potential adverse reactions leading to joint replacement. ⋯ This is the first phase III randomized, controlled trial to demonstrate that nerve growth factor blockade by tanezumab has superior analgesic efficacy in OA of the knee compared with placebo. Tanezumab was well tolerated, and reports of worsening OA and/or joint replacement were evenly distributed across the treatment groups.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Respiration-induced hypoalgesia: exploration of potential mechanisms.
Slow breathing is used as a means to reduce pain, yet the mechanisms responsible for respiration-induced hypoalgesia are poorly understood. The present study asked 30 healthy participants (M(age) = 21 years, M(education) = 15 years, 80% white non-Hispanic) to breathe at normal, slow (50% normal), and fast (125% normal) rates while constant-intensity, suprathreshold electric stimulations were delivered to the sural nerve to elicit pain and the nociceptive flexion reflex (NFR, a measure of spinal nociception). Stimulations were equally balanced across inhalations and exhalations to determine whether parasympathetic activation during exhalations contributes to hypoalgesia. Respiration rate, heart rate variability (HRV, a measure of parasympathetic activity), heart rate, and subjective arousal were assessed as manipulation checks. Slow breathing reduced pain relative to normal breathing and fast breathing, but NFR was not influenced by breathing. Further, pain and NFR did not differ between exhalations and inhalations, and changes in HRV did not correlate with changes in pain or NFR. Together, these findings suggest that respiration-induced hypoalgesia does not require gating of spinal nociception or changes in parasympathetic activity. ⋯ Slow breathing reduced pain relative to normal and fast breathing. This respiration-induced hypoalgesia does not appear to be due to gating of spinal nociception or changes in parasympathetic activity.