(HealthDay)—People with chronic back pain often try painkillers and other treatments without success. Now, a new study suggests a program of education and exercise may provide relief.
Helping patients think differently about pain and encouraging them to move in ways they previously feared appears to ease pain and improve function, researchers say.
“People with chronic neck and/or back pain should be educated about their pain, [and] should be reassured,” said lead researcher Anneleen Malfliet.
They should “learn to put pain into the right perspective, should remain active or increase their activity levels gradually, and should avoid fear of moving,” said Malfliet, of Vrije University Brussel in Belgium.
Physical therapists and doctors can guide patients in this process, she added.
“They should also avoid the use of scary, unreassuring labels or diagnoses,” and not limit movement in therapy, she said.
To test the experimental approach, Malfliet and her colleagues randomly assigned 22 men and 38 women to the program. They assigned another 25 men and 35 women to standard care—exercise, and back and neck education.
“The experimental therapy, focusing on functionality, not using pain as a reliable symptom, and not as a guideline to adapt movements or activities, leads to better treatment outcomes,” Malfliet said.
The program led to a significant and clinically important reduction of pain, she said.
Patients in the program reported 50 percent less pain after the treatment. They also reported paying less attention to pain.
In general, they also had less disability, a reduced fear of moving, and improvement in mental and physical outlook, according to the study authors.
“These positive effects were found until the last follow-up measurement at one year after treatment,” Malfliet said.
The program involves “pain neuroscience education with cognition-targeted motor control training,” she said.
What does that mean?
Pain neuroscience education aims to change patients’ beliefs about pain, to increase their knowledge of pain and to decrease its threat, Malfliet said.
Besides focusing on the makeup of the spine, the program stressed lifting techniques and stretching. Participants also learned the value of strength, endurance and fitness training.
Many back patients are afraid certain movements will cause them pain, so they avoid them. The new exercises are designed to help overcome that fear, Malfliet said.
The regimen included the best known exercises for back pain and general exercises, she said. It also included group classes, online activities and personalized training sessions.
“Be active, and move without fear of pain or reinjury,” Malfliet said. “Your level of activity or way of moving before the chronic pain began should be used as a guideline target.”
Whereas back pain studies involving exercise and drugs have shown changes to the brain’s gray matter, the program in this study found no brain changes, Malfliet said.
Dr. Kiran Patel is director of neurosurgical pain at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.
Patel said the dual mental and exercise approach is used to treat phantom pain in patients after a limb amputation. It’s rarely used for back pain, she said.
But this study suggests these methods also can help reduce spinal pain, she said.
“The program, however, is quite time-intensive and is not covered by insurance,” Patel said.
“Although it’s promising, we really have to see the benefit long-term to justify the cost,” she added.
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