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The Association Between Conditioned Pain Modulation and Pain Catastrophizing in Chronic Low Back Pain

The Efficiency of Conditioned Pain Modulation is Associated With Levels of Pain Catastrophizing in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03644810
Enrollment
44
Registered
2018-08-23
Start date
2017-05-01
Completion date
2018-11-08
Last updated
2018-12-24

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Catastrophizing Pain, Pain, Somatic, Chronic Low Back Pain

Brief summary

This study evaluates the potential association between pain catastrophizing thoughts and the ability to dampen pain via endogenous descending inhibition. Half of the participants are persons with chronic low back pain and the other half are age and gender-matched controls

Detailed description

Pain catastrophizing is a cognitive feature commonly seen in various musculoskeletal pain population and is considered an important factor to account for in rehabilitation. The ability to dampen pain via endogenous pain modulatory mechanisms is likewise known to be reduced in musculoskeletal pain conditions. Studies utilizing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) have demonstrated that the supraspinal areas involved in pain-related cognitive processing to a great extent overlap with those involved in endogenous pain modulation. Therefore, it is plausible that factors such as pain catastrophizing thoughts may affect the nervous systems ability to dampen pain. Chronic low back pain is the single clinical problem with the biggest impact in the modern society. Previous studies have demonstrated that pain catastrophizing and reduced endogenous pain inhibition are part of the clinical picture. However, previous studies have never investigated a potential relationship between these two factors.

Interventions

DIAGNOSTIC_TESTPPT measurement

The sensitivity to pressure which is gradually increased is assessed. The procedure is performed at the back and the lower leg

A validated questionnaire that measures three domains of pain-related catastrophizing thoughts: helplessness, rumination and excessive magnification

PROCEDURECold Pressor Test

The participant submerges one hand into a tank of cold (5 deg C), circulating water. The procedure is commonly know to decrease the sensitivity to pressure (PPT procedure) so that a difference appears in pain sensitivity when comparing PPT values before and after the procedure

Sponsors

Spine Centre of Southern Denmark
CollaboratorOTHER
Aalborg University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Masking description

The participants are blind to the study hypothesis and therefore the expected outcome of the tests performed

Intervention model description

The study has a cross-sectional design and includes individuals (males and females) with and without chronic low back pain into two, equally large groups

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

Low back pain group: * chronic low back pain ( lasting more than 3 months) * intensity of ≥ 3/10 on a numeric rating scale * pain is located in the area between the gluteal folds below to the thoracolumbal junction above. Controls: No current or previous history of musculoskeletal pain of ongoing nature

Exclusion criteria

Applies for both groups: * Signs of radicular pain or other specific medical conditions e.g. rheumatologic disease or diabetes * Pregnancy

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Association between levels of pain catastrophizing thoughts and endogenous pain inhibitionOne session (45 min)The pain catastrophizing scale score is correlated with the changes in Pressure Pain Thresholds before and after the cold pressor test See descriptions of each assessment method below (outcome 2 and outcome 3, respectively)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Changes in pressure pain thresholds (determined with pressure algometry) before and after the cold pressor test30 minutesPressure Pain Thresholds (PPT) are assessed before and after the cold pressor test PPT measure the pressure needed to experience the first instance of pain. For this purpose, a pressure algometer (a pistol-like device with a 1cm2 contact surface) is used. Higher levels of pressure reflect lower pain sensitivity. In the cold pressor test, the subject is asked to submerge one hand into circulating water (constant temperature: 4 degrees C) for 2 minutes. When removing it from the water, the subject is asked to indicate the perceived pain using a numeric rating scale (see below). Before and after the cold pressor test, the PPT measurements are performed. The difference in PPT values before and after the cold pressor test is used in the correlation analysis described in outcome 1. The numeric rating scale is used to determine the perceived pain intensity from the cold water. The scale is runs from 0 - 10 where 0 is anchored with no pain and 10 reflects the worst pain imaginable
Catastrophizing thoughts measured with the Pain Catastrophizing Scale15 minutesThe pain catastrophizing score by filling out the pain catastrophizing scale.The pain catastrophizing scale consists of 13 sentences describing pain-related thoughts or feelings. These are divided into 3 domains: rumination, magnification and helplessness. The subject is asked to indicate how how well each sentence applies for them: 0 = not at all, 1 = to a slight degree, 2 = to a moderate degree, 3 = to a great degree and 4 = all the time. The total score on the questionnaire can lie between 0 - 52 where a higher score indicates higher levels of pain catastrophizing thoughts.

Countries

Denmark

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026