Complementary treatment comparison for chronic pain management: A randomized longitudinal study.

<h4>Background</h4>In chronic pain, it seems that the effect of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is boosted when it is combined with hypnosis. The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of self-hypnosis combined with self-care (i.e., a type of CBT) compared to music/self-care, se...

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Autores principales: Aminata Bicego, Justine Monseur, Alain Collinet, Anne-Françoise Donneau, Robert Fontaine, Dominique Libbrecht, Nicole Malaise, Anne-Sophie Nyssen, Mélissa Raaf, Floriane Rousseaux, Irène Salamun, Cécile Staquet, Sandrine Teuwis, Marco Tomasella, Marie-Elisabeth Faymonville, Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse
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Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:321dbde2094144f5974288f50f242c4d2021-12-02T20:18:33ZComplementary treatment comparison for chronic pain management: A randomized longitudinal study.1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0256001https://doaj.org/article/321dbde2094144f5974288f50f242c4d2021-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256001https://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203<h4>Background</h4>In chronic pain, it seems that the effect of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is boosted when it is combined with hypnosis. The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of self-hypnosis combined with self-care (i.e., a type of CBT) compared to music/self-care, self-care and psychoeducation/CBT and to evaluate their long-term effects.<h4>Methods</h4>An open label randomized clinical trial enrolled patients with chronic pain and was carried out at the University Hospital of Liège (Belgium). Patients were randomized into four groups: self-hypnosis/self-care, music/self-care, self-care, psychoeducation/CBT (7 monthly sessions of 2 hours). Two follow-up sessions were delivered at 6- and 12-month. Levels of pain, fatigue intensity, anxiety, depression, insomnia severity, disability, health locus of control, mental and physical quality of life and attitudes (control, disability, harm, emotion, medical cure, medication, solicitude) towards pain were assessed before and after the treatments, and at follow-up.<h4>Results</h4>203 patients were randomized: 52 in self-hypnosis/self-care, 59 in music/self-care, 47 in self-care, and 45 in psychoeducation/CBT. No group effect was found. A significant time effect was showed. Directly after the treatment, all groups decreased in pain attitudes and physical quality of life. Perceived control increased. At 6-month, all patients kept their levels of physical quality of life and perceived control, and showed decrease in pain intensity, harm, emotion and medical cure. At 12-month, scores that had change previously remained ameliorated, a decrease in insomnia severity and an increase in internal locus of control were observed.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The present findings are encouraging as they display long-term beneficial effects of complementary biopsychosocial-based treatments in chronic pain. It seems that patients continued to apply the learnt strategies as improvements were observed one year after the treatments had ended.Aminata BicegoJustine MonseurAlain CollinetAnne-Françoise DonneauRobert FontaineDominique LibbrechtNicole MalaiseAnne-Sophie NyssenMélissa RaafFloriane RousseauxIrène SalamunCécile StaquetSandrine TeuwisMarco TomasellaMarie-Elisabeth FaymonvilleAudrey VanhaudenhuysePublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 8, p e0256001 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Aminata Bicego
Justine Monseur
Alain Collinet
Anne-Françoise Donneau
Robert Fontaine
Dominique Libbrecht
Nicole Malaise
Anne-Sophie Nyssen
Mélissa Raaf
Floriane Rousseaux
Irène Salamun
Cécile Staquet
Sandrine Teuwis
Marco Tomasella
Marie-Elisabeth Faymonville
Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse
Complementary treatment comparison for chronic pain management: A randomized longitudinal study.
description <h4>Background</h4>In chronic pain, it seems that the effect of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is boosted when it is combined with hypnosis. The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of self-hypnosis combined with self-care (i.e., a type of CBT) compared to music/self-care, self-care and psychoeducation/CBT and to evaluate their long-term effects.<h4>Methods</h4>An open label randomized clinical trial enrolled patients with chronic pain and was carried out at the University Hospital of Liège (Belgium). Patients were randomized into four groups: self-hypnosis/self-care, music/self-care, self-care, psychoeducation/CBT (7 monthly sessions of 2 hours). Two follow-up sessions were delivered at 6- and 12-month. Levels of pain, fatigue intensity, anxiety, depression, insomnia severity, disability, health locus of control, mental and physical quality of life and attitudes (control, disability, harm, emotion, medical cure, medication, solicitude) towards pain were assessed before and after the treatments, and at follow-up.<h4>Results</h4>203 patients were randomized: 52 in self-hypnosis/self-care, 59 in music/self-care, 47 in self-care, and 45 in psychoeducation/CBT. No group effect was found. A significant time effect was showed. Directly after the treatment, all groups decreased in pain attitudes and physical quality of life. Perceived control increased. At 6-month, all patients kept their levels of physical quality of life and perceived control, and showed decrease in pain intensity, harm, emotion and medical cure. At 12-month, scores that had change previously remained ameliorated, a decrease in insomnia severity and an increase in internal locus of control were observed.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The present findings are encouraging as they display long-term beneficial effects of complementary biopsychosocial-based treatments in chronic pain. It seems that patients continued to apply the learnt strategies as improvements were observed one year after the treatments had ended.
format article
author Aminata Bicego
Justine Monseur
Alain Collinet
Anne-Françoise Donneau
Robert Fontaine
Dominique Libbrecht
Nicole Malaise
Anne-Sophie Nyssen
Mélissa Raaf
Floriane Rousseaux
Irène Salamun
Cécile Staquet
Sandrine Teuwis
Marco Tomasella
Marie-Elisabeth Faymonville
Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse
author_facet Aminata Bicego
Justine Monseur
Alain Collinet
Anne-Françoise Donneau
Robert Fontaine
Dominique Libbrecht
Nicole Malaise
Anne-Sophie Nyssen
Mélissa Raaf
Floriane Rousseaux
Irène Salamun
Cécile Staquet
Sandrine Teuwis
Marco Tomasella
Marie-Elisabeth Faymonville
Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse
author_sort Aminata Bicego
title Complementary treatment comparison for chronic pain management: A randomized longitudinal study.
title_short Complementary treatment comparison for chronic pain management: A randomized longitudinal study.
title_full Complementary treatment comparison for chronic pain management: A randomized longitudinal study.
title_fullStr Complementary treatment comparison for chronic pain management: A randomized longitudinal study.
title_full_unstemmed Complementary treatment comparison for chronic pain management: A randomized longitudinal study.
title_sort complementary treatment comparison for chronic pain management: a randomized longitudinal study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/321dbde2094144f5974288f50f242c4d
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