Feasibility of brief behavioral telehealth interventions for sleep and pain in adults with chronic musculoskeletal orofacial pain: An idiographic clinical trial.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q2 DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE
Linda Sangalli, Gabriel R Gilmore, Isabel Moreno-Hay, Lauren N Whitehurst, Anna Alessandri-Bonetti, Ian A Boggero
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: Brief behavioral interventions targeting pain (Physical Self-Regulation, PSR) or sleep (Brief Behavioral Intervention for Insomnia, BBTI) show promise for interdisciplinary management of chronic pain, though their feasibility with chronic musculoskeletal orofacial pain (MSK-OFP) populations remains underexplored. This pilot study assessed the feasibility of a randomized clinical trial (RCT) of these interventions in a university-affiliated tertiary OFP clinic and explored clinical changes in pain, sleep, and other secondary outcomes.

Methods: Treatment-seeking participants (N=19) with chronic MSK-OFP and insomnia were randomized to three-session PSR or BBTI. At pre- and post-intervention, participants completed questionnaires (assessing pain intensity, insomnia symptomatology, sleep quality, headache disability, fatigue, jaw-movement limitations, and quality of life), 8 consecutive days of actigraphy and morning/evening diaries. Feasibility outcomes were recruitment, retention, and adherence rates. Clinical outcomes included clinically-meaningful reductions in insomnia symptoms (Insomnia Severity Index [ISI]<15) and pain intensity (>2.5 point on 0-10 Numerical Rating Scale).

Results: Over a 17-month period, of 19 consenting participants (88.9% females, 38.4±12.2y/o, recruitment rate: 1.1/month),12 (92% females, 38.5±11.5y/o) completed the study (retention rate: 63.2%) with high completion rate (questionnaires: 95.8%, daily diaries: 95%, actigraphy: 100%). Despite no significant changes in pain, ISI scores decreased by 6.0 and 4.8-points among BBTI and PSR groups. Improvements in sleep quality, headache disability, fatigue, jaw-movement limitations, and quality of life wereobserved.

Conclusion: RCTs of brief behavioral interventions are feasible in tertiary-OFP clinics.

对患有慢性肌肉骨骼口面部疼痛的成人进行睡眠和疼痛的简短行为远程医疗干预的可行性:一项具体的临床试验。
目的:针对疼痛的短暂行为干预(Physical Self-Regulation, PSR)或睡眠的短暂行为干预(Brief behavioral Intervention for Insomnia, BBTI)有望用于慢性疼痛的跨学科管理,尽管它们在慢性肌肉骨骼口腔面部疼痛(MSK-OFP)人群中的可行性仍有待探索。本初步研究在一所大学附属的三级OFP诊所评估了这些干预措施的随机临床试验(RCT)的可行性,并探讨了疼痛、睡眠和其他次要结局的临床变化。方法:寻求治疗的慢性MSK-OFP和失眠患者(N=19)随机分为三组PSR或BBTI。在干预前和干预后,参与者完成问卷调查(评估疼痛强度、失眠症状、睡眠质量、头痛残疾、疲劳、下颌运动受限和生活质量)、连续8天的活动记录和早晚日记。可行性结果包括招募率、留任率和依从率。临床结果包括有临床意义的失眠症状减轻(失眠严重指数[ISI]在0-10数值评定量表中为2.5分)。结果:在17个月的时间里,19名同意参与者(88.9%女性,38.4±12.2y/o,招募率:1.1/月),12名(92%女性,38.5±11.5y/o)完成了研究(保留率:63.2%),完成率高(问卷调查:95.8%,日常日记:95%,活动记录:100%)。尽管疼痛没有明显变化,但BBTI组和PSR组的ISI评分分别下降了6.0分和4.8分。观察到睡眠质量、头痛残疾、疲劳、下颌运动受限和生活质量的改善。结论:随机对照试验的简短行为干预在三级ofp诊所是可行的。
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来源期刊
Cranio-The Journal of Craniomandibular & Sleep Practice
Cranio-The Journal of Craniomandibular & Sleep Practice DENTISTRY, ORAL SURGERY & MEDICINE-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
92
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: CRANIO: The Journal of Craniomandibular & Sleep Practice is the oldest and largest journal in the world devoted to temporomandibular disorders, and now also includes articles on all aspects of sleep medicine. The Journal is multidisciplinary in its scope, with editorial board members from all areas of medicine and dentistry, including general dentists, oral surgeons, orthopaedists, radiologists, chiropractors, professors and behavioural scientists, physical therapists, acupuncturists, osteopathic and ear, nose and throat physicians. CRANIO publishes commendable works from outstanding researchers and clinicians in their respective fields. The multidisciplinary format allows individuals practicing with a TMD emphasis to stay abreast of related disciplines, as each issue presents multiple topics from overlapping areas of interest. CRANIO''s current readership (thousands) is comprised primarily of dentists; however, many physicians, physical therapists, chiropractors, osteopathic physicians and other related specialists subscribe and contribute to the Journal.
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