Interoceptive bodily awareness in patients seeking pain relief with osteopathic manipulative treatment: an observational cohort pilot study.

IF 1.4 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Danielle Emmet, Glenn Davis, Stacey Pierce-Talsma, Jay H. Shubrook, Wolf Mehling
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Abstract

CONTEXT Interoceptive bodily awareness (IBA) is one's attentional focus on and relationship with comfortable and uncomfortable (e.g., pain) internal body sensations. Integrating IBA into research on osteopathic manipulative treatment (OMT) is growing, both as an outcome and predictor of treatment outcomes; however, it has yet to be studied in a clinical setting. OBJECTIVES We aimed to conduct a pilot study to measure IBA, with the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA), in patients seeking OMT for pain, and to test if OMT exposure may be associated with higher IBA as measured by the MAIA. The primary outcome was the change in MAIA scores, and the secondary outcomes were reduction in pain intensity, reduction in pain interference, and increase in participants' perception of change post-OMT. METHODS A convenience sample was recruited from individuals presenting for OMT appointments at a College of Osteopathic Medicine OMT teaching clinic. Participants were recruited into our single-arm observational cohort study (n=36), and categorized into one of two groups, OMT-naïve (n=19) or OMT-experienced (n=17), based on prior exposure to OMT. We measured MAIA scores and clinical pain-related outcomes prior to, immediately after, and at 1 and 3 weeks after a usual-care OMT session in the clinic. Covariates including experience with mind-body activities, non-OMT body work, and physical and emotional trauma were also collected to explore potential relationships. We utilized t tests to compare MAIA scores and pain outcomes between groups and across time points. Stepwise regression models were utilized to explore potential relationships with covariates. RESULTS The OMT-experienced group scored higher on the MAIA scales "Not-worrying" (p=0.002) and "Trusting" (p=0.028) at baseline. There were no significant changes in the MAIA scores before and after the single OMT session. Analysis of secondary outcomes revealed that all pain outcomes significantly decreased post-OMT (p<0.05), with the largest relative improvements in the acute pain and OMT-naïve subgroups, with diminishing effects over time. CONCLUSIONS Assessing IBA with MAIA in a clinical OMT setting is feasible. There were significant positive correlations between OMT exposure and two of the eight MAIA scales. Future studies are justified to further explore this relationship.
寻求通过整骨疗法缓解疼痛的患者的身体互感意识:一项观察性队列试点研究。
内容提要 身体内感知意识(IBA)是指一个人对身体内部舒适和不舒适(如疼痛)感觉的关注以及与这些感觉之间的关系。我们旨在开展一项试验性研究,通过多维互感意识评估(MAIA)测量寻求整骨疗法治疗疼痛的患者的互感意识,并测试整骨疗法是否与 MAIA 测量的较高互感意识相关。主要结果是 MAIA 分数的变化,次要结果是疼痛强度的降低、疼痛干扰的减少以及参与者对 OMT 后变化感知的增加。参与者被纳入我们的单臂观察性队列研究(36 人),并根据之前接受 OMT 的情况被分为两组:OMT 未接受者(19 人)或 OMT 有经验者(17 人)。我们测量了MAIA评分和临床疼痛相关结果,包括在诊所进行常规OMT治疗之前、之后以及治疗后1周和3周的情况。我们还收集了包括身心活动经验、非 OMT 身体工作以及身体和情感创伤在内的协变量,以探究其中的潜在关系。我们使用 t 检验来比较不同组别和不同时间点的 MAIA 评分和疼痛结果。结果有 OMT 经验的组在 MAIA 量表 "不担心"(P=0.002)和 "信任"(P=0.028)基线得分更高。单次 OMT 治疗前后,MAIA 评分无明显变化。对次要结果的分析表明,所有疼痛结果在 OMT 后都显著下降(p<0.05),急性疼痛和 OMT 未接受治疗的亚组的相对改善幅度最大,随着时间的推移,效果逐渐减弱。在八个 MAIA 量表中,OMT 暴露与两个量表之间存在明显的正相关。未来的研究有理由进一步探讨这种关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Osteopathic Medicine
Journal of Osteopathic Medicine Health Professions-Complementary and Manual Therapy
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
13.30%
发文量
118
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