Muscle Function, Central Nervous System Sensitization, and Pain Profiling in Patients With Subacromial Pain (SAP-CNSS).
NCT ID: NCT03326466
Last Updated: 2019-02-21
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
72 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2017-11-13
2020-07-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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The primary aim of this study is to compare central nervous system sensitization (central sensitization), shoulder muscle function and shoulder pain distribution in patients with subacromial pain to that in pain free healthy matched controls.
The secondary aim of this study is to investigate if (symptom) dose/response relationships exist between shoulder symptom duration and: central sensitization, shoulder muscle function and shoulder pain distribution in patients with subacromial pain.
Although the present study is exploratory, it is the working hypothesis that i) patients with subacromial pain have increased central sensitization, reduced shoulder muscle function, and increased pain distribution when compared to healthy controls, and ii) symptom dose/response relationships exist, indicated by increased central sensitization, reduced shoulder muscle function, and increased pain distribution with longer symptom duration in patients with subacromial pain.
The methodology includes: surface EMG recordings to quantify shoulder muscle activity; dynamometry to quantify maximal voluntary contraction force and submaximal isometric force steadiness; mechanical and computer-controlled algometry to quantify CNS sensitization; computerized pain drawings to quantify pain distribution; and patient-reported assessments of shoulder pain (SPADI) and catastrophizing (PCS).
The study does not include any intervention.
The present study is considered exploratory and the first in a line of studies using these outcome measures in this patient population. All outcomes listed below are valued equally, as the study is exploratory. All analyses will be used to indicate effect sizes in order to plan for subsequent follow-up studies.
Although the study is considered exploratory, the statistical approach includes the pre-defined primary and secondary analyses outlined below.
Primary analysis: The primary analysis will compare 36 included patients to 36 matched healthy controls regarding the 3 main outcomes: shoulder muscle function, CNS sensitization and shoulder pain distribution.
Secondary analysis: The secondary analysis will compare the three subgroups of patients differing in their symptom duration (0.5-3 months of pain, 3-6 months of pain and +6 months of pain), regarding the 3 main outcomes: CNS sensitization, shoulder muscle function, and shoulder pain distribution, to indicate (symptom) dose/response relationships, using descriptive statistics. The symptom duration groups may be redefined, if recruitment is slow for one or more of the groups outlined above.
Collaborators:
Thomas Bandholm, PT, Professor, PhD. PMR-C.
Kristian Thorborg, PT, Associate Professor, PhD. Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Copenhagen, Amager/Hvidovre Hospital.
Thomas Graven-Nielsen, Professor, Director. CNAP.
Michael Skovdal Rathleff, PT, PhD. Department of Health Science and Technology Aalborg University.
Shellie Boudreau, Associate Professor. Department of Health Science and Technology Aalborg University.
Louisa Wilquin, PT. School of Physiotherapy, Metropolitan University College Copenhagen.
Mikkel Bek Clausen, PT, PhD-fellow. Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Copenhagen, Amager/Hvidovre Hospital.
Markus Due Jacobsen, PhD. National Research Center for the Working Environment.
Lars Andersen, Professor, PhD. National Research Center for the Working Environment.
Conditions
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Study Design
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CASE_CONTROL
CROSS_SECTIONAL
Study Groups
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Patients with SAP
No interventions assigned to this group
Healthy Controls
No interventions assigned to this group
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Have positive results from minimum 3 out of 5 clinical tests.
* Have experienced pain ranking 4 or above on the VRS scale within the last 7 days.
* Are able to speak and understand Danish.
* Have given informed consent to participate in the study after they have fully understood the content of the study.
Exclusion Criteria
* Have received a corticosteroid injection within the last six weeks.
* Report having had a shoulder fracture within 6 months.
* Report having had surgery on the affected shoulder.
* Report having radiologically verified glenohumeral osteoarthritis.
* Have a luxation or sub-luxation of the glenohumeral or the acromioclavicular joint, clinically suspected labrum lesion, clinically suspected complete traumatic tear of the rotator cuff, frozen shoulder, suspected competing diagnoses (i.e. rheumatoid arthritis, cancer, neurological disorders, and fibromyalgia).
* Have a history of diagnosed major psychiatric disorder.
* Have a history of illicit drug use; be currently abusing alcohol or currently withdrawing from alcohol abuse.
* Have a history of heart disease.
* Are pregnant.
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Research - Copenhagen (PMR-C).
UNKNOWN
School of Physiotherapy, Metropolitan University College Copenhagen.
UNKNOWN
Center for Neuroplasticity and Pain (CNAP).
UNKNOWN
National Research Center for the Working Environment.
UNKNOWN
Hvidovre University Hospital
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Bjarki Haraldsson
MSc, PhD
Principal Investigators
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Thomas Bandholm, PhD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
Professor, Head of Research, PMR-C.
Locations
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Hvidovre University Hospital
Hvidovre, Sealand, Denmark
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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SAP-CNSS
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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