{"title":"Prevention and management of shoulder pain in the hemiplegic patient","authors":"Tamara Page RN BN GradDipNSc(HighDep), Craig Lockwood RN BN GradDipClinNurs MNSc","doi":"10.1046/j.1479-6988.2003.00005.x","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div>\n \n <p><b>Objective </b> The objective of this review was to summarise the best available research related to the prevention and management of shoulder pain in the hemiplegic patient.</p>\n <p><b>Inclusion criteria </b> This review considered all studies that included hemiplegic patients post-cerebral vascular accident (CVA). Interventions of interest were any treatments or programs used to manage or prevent shoulder pain secondary to hemiplegia. The primary outcomes of interest were those related to pain. This review considered any randomised controlled trials (RCT) that evaluated the effectiveness of interventions that addressed shoulder pain in hemiplegic patients. In the absence of RCT, other research designs such as non-randomised controlled trials, time series and case series were also considered for inclusion in a narrative summary.</p>\n <p><b>Search strategy </b> The search sought to find both published and unpublished studies. Databases were searched up to February 2002 and included Medline, CINAHL, Current Contents, Cochrane Library, Expanded Academic Index, Electronic Collections Online, Turning Research Into Practice (TRIP), Dissertation Abstracts and Proceedings First. The reference lists of all studies identified were searched for additional studies.</p>\n <p><b>Assessment of methodological quality </b> All studies were checked for methodological quality by two reviewers and data was extracted using a data extraction tool.</p>\n <p><b>Results </b> Current research evaluating the effectiveness of treatment interventions on hemiplegic shoulder pain is very limited. The studies were very diverse in their nature of research. There has been no replication of studies, with the studies found using different populations, interventions or outcome measures. Not one study could be compared with another. Meta-analysis was unable to be performed not only because of inadequate reporting of results, but more often due to differences between the studies’ participants and the range of interventions used. The diversity in interval post-CVA also makes it difficult to make any comparisons between studies. For this reason the review is in narrative form.</p>\n <p><b>Conclusions </b> With this limited evidence, no single intervention has been identified that offers a dramatic effect in terms of treating pain in the hemiplegic shoulder. There is potential for some benefits for the patient's functional and comfort status, thereby improving their quality of life and maximising their social participation.</p>\n <p>Preventive interventions demonstrated that a shoulder positioning policy had no statistically significant effect on pain. Strapping within 48 h significantly delayed the onset of pain and current research evaluating exercise is not limited to just one area of exercise, but a diverse range, making it difficult to make any comparisons. Some studies did suggest evidence of improvement, albeit limited. However, some of the exercise techniques aggravated shoulder pain. Treatment interventions demonstrated that electromyogram biofeedback cannot be evaluated as a stand-alone therapy as it is used in conjunction with relaxation therapy. Intra-articular Triamcinolone Acetonide injections in a small RCT have not been proven to be beneficial, and are associated with a high incidence of side-effects. Different exercise techniques may aggravate shoulder pain more than others (e.g. Bobath technique compared to cryotherapy). The systematic review on the effectiveness of functional electrical stimulation was used for prevention and treatment and concluded that there is currently no evidence for effect.</p>\n </div>","PeriodicalId":100738,"journal":{"name":"JBI Reports","volume":"1 5","pages":"149-165"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2003-09-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1046/j.1479-6988.2003.00005.x","citationCount":"23","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"JBI Reports","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1479-6988.2003.00005.x","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 23
Abstract
Objective The objective of this review was to summarise the best available research related to the prevention and management of shoulder pain in the hemiplegic patient.
Inclusion criteria This review considered all studies that included hemiplegic patients post-cerebral vascular accident (CVA). Interventions of interest were any treatments or programs used to manage or prevent shoulder pain secondary to hemiplegia. The primary outcomes of interest were those related to pain. This review considered any randomised controlled trials (RCT) that evaluated the effectiveness of interventions that addressed shoulder pain in hemiplegic patients. In the absence of RCT, other research designs such as non-randomised controlled trials, time series and case series were also considered for inclusion in a narrative summary.
Search strategy The search sought to find both published and unpublished studies. Databases were searched up to February 2002 and included Medline, CINAHL, Current Contents, Cochrane Library, Expanded Academic Index, Electronic Collections Online, Turning Research Into Practice (TRIP), Dissertation Abstracts and Proceedings First. The reference lists of all studies identified were searched for additional studies.
Assessment of methodological quality All studies were checked for methodological quality by two reviewers and data was extracted using a data extraction tool.
Results Current research evaluating the effectiveness of treatment interventions on hemiplegic shoulder pain is very limited. The studies were very diverse in their nature of research. There has been no replication of studies, with the studies found using different populations, interventions or outcome measures. Not one study could be compared with another. Meta-analysis was unable to be performed not only because of inadequate reporting of results, but more often due to differences between the studies’ participants and the range of interventions used. The diversity in interval post-CVA also makes it difficult to make any comparisons between studies. For this reason the review is in narrative form.
Conclusions With this limited evidence, no single intervention has been identified that offers a dramatic effect in terms of treating pain in the hemiplegic shoulder. There is potential for some benefits for the patient's functional and comfort status, thereby improving their quality of life and maximising their social participation.
Preventive interventions demonstrated that a shoulder positioning policy had no statistically significant effect on pain. Strapping within 48 h significantly delayed the onset of pain and current research evaluating exercise is not limited to just one area of exercise, but a diverse range, making it difficult to make any comparisons. Some studies did suggest evidence of improvement, albeit limited. However, some of the exercise techniques aggravated shoulder pain. Treatment interventions demonstrated that electromyogram biofeedback cannot be evaluated as a stand-alone therapy as it is used in conjunction with relaxation therapy. Intra-articular Triamcinolone Acetonide injections in a small RCT have not been proven to be beneficial, and are associated with a high incidence of side-effects. Different exercise techniques may aggravate shoulder pain more than others (e.g. Bobath technique compared to cryotherapy). The systematic review on the effectiveness of functional electrical stimulation was used for prevention and treatment and concluded that there is currently no evidence for effect.
目的本综述的目的是总结有关预防和治疗偏瘫患者肩痛的最佳研究。纳入标准:本综述纳入了所有涉及脑血管意外(CVA)后偏瘫患者的研究。感兴趣的干预措施是用于管理或预防偏瘫继发肩痛的任何治疗或计划。主要关注的结果是与疼痛相关的结果。本综述纳入了所有评估偏瘫患者肩部疼痛干预措施有效性的随机对照试验(RCT)。在没有随机对照试验的情况下,其他研究设计,如非随机对照试验、时间序列和病例序列,也被考虑纳入叙述性总结。搜索策略搜索旨在找到已发表和未发表的研究。检索到2002年2月的数据库,包括Medline、CINAHL、Current Contents、Cochrane Library、Expanded Academic Index、Electronic Collections Online、Turning Research Into Practice (TRIP)、Dissertation Abstracts and Proceedings First。检索所有研究的参考文献列表以寻找其他研究。所有研究的方法学质量均由两名审稿人进行检查,并使用数据提取工具提取数据。结果目前评价偏瘫肩痛治疗干预措施有效性的研究非常有限。这些研究在研究性质上是非常多样化的。由于这些研究使用了不同的人群、干预措施或结果衡量标准,因此没有重复的研究。没有一项研究可以与另一项进行比较。荟萃分析无法进行,不仅是因为结果报告不充分,更常见的是由于研究参与者和使用的干预措施范围之间的差异。cva后间隔的多样性也使得研究之间难以进行比较。由于这个原因,这篇评论是叙事性的。在有限的证据下,没有一种单一的干预措施能够在治疗偏瘫肩关节疼痛方面产生显著的效果。对患者的功能和舒适状况有潜在的好处,从而改善他们的生活质量,最大限度地提高他们的社会参与。预防性干预表明肩部定位策略对疼痛没有统计学上的显著影响。在48小时内捆扎可以显著延缓疼痛的发作,目前评估运动的研究并不局限于运动的一个领域,而是一个不同的范围,这使得很难进行任何比较。一些研究确实提出了改善的证据,尽管有限。然而,一些运动技巧加重了肩痛。治疗干预表明,肌电生物反馈不能作为一种单独的治疗进行评估,因为它与放松疗法一起使用。在一项小型随机对照试验中,关节内注射曲安奈德尚未被证明是有益的,并且与高副作用发生率相关。不同的运动技术可能会加重肩痛(例如,与冷冻疗法相比,Bobath技术)。对功能性电刺激用于预防和治疗的有效性进行了系统评价,结论是目前没有证据表明有效果。