AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to review the effectiveness of manual therapy in reducing fear-avoidance, kinesiophobia, and pain catastrophizing for chronic musculoskeletal pain patients.
  • Eleven randomized controlled trials with 717 participants were analyzed, showing that manual therapy was not significantly better than no treatment or other interventions in reducing the targeted issues at both short and intermediate-term follow-ups.
  • The evidence quality was rated as low to very low, suggesting the need for more research to better understand the impact of manual therapy on these pain-related fears.

Article Abstract

Objective: To systematically review the effectiveness of manual therapy on fear-avoidance, kinesiophobia, and pain catastrophizing in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain.

Literature Search: Databases (Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL, PEDro, CENTRAL, Web of Science, and SCOPUS) were searched from inception up to March 2020.

Study Selection Criteria: Two reviewers independently selected randomized controlled trials that investigated the effects of manual therapy associated or not with other interventions on fear-avoidance, kinesiophobia and pain catastrophizing in patients with chronic musculoskeletal pain.

Data Synthesis: Standardized Mean Differences (SMD) and 95% confidence interval (CI) were calculated using a random-effects inverse variance model for meta-analysis according to the outcome of interest, comparison group and follow-up period. The level of evidence was synthesized using GRADE.

Results: Eleven studies were included with a total sample of 717 individuals. Manual therapy was not superior to no treatment on reducing fear-avoidance at short-term (low quality of evidence; SMD = -0.45, 95% CI -0.99 to 0.09), and intermediate-term (low quality of evidence; SMD = -0.48, 95% CI -1.0 to 0.04). Based on very-low quality of evidence, manual therapy was not better than other treatments (SMD = 0.10, 95% CI -0.56 to 0.77) on reducing fear-avoidance, kinesiophobia (SMD = -0.12, 95% CI -0.87 to 0.63) and pain catastrophizing (SMD = -0.16, 95% CI -0.48 to 0.17) at short-term.

Conclusion: Manual therapy may not be superior to no treatment or other treatments on improving fear-avoidance, kinesiophobia and pain catastrophizing, based on very low or low quality of evidence. More studies are necessary to strengthen the evidence of effects of manual therapy on pain-related fear outcomes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.msksp.2020.102311DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

manual therapy
28
pain catastrophizing
20
kinesiophobia pain
16
fear-avoidance kinesiophobia
16
quality evidence
16
effects manual
12
chronic musculoskeletal
12
low quality
12
catastrophizing patients
8
patients chronic
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!