Painful physiotherapy program helps treat chronic pain
November 13th, 2009 - 1:29 pm ICT by ANI
- Washington, Nov 13 (ANI): The popular saying ‘more pain, more gain’ might hold some truth for people suffering from chronic pain, for a new study has revealed that aggressive physiotherapy program often leads to far better results than a more cautious pain-free approach.
The research team from Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at Bethesda Hospital in The Netherlands has found that nearly half those who were given the painful treatment recovered normal physical function, whereas those who avoided painful physiotherapy usually had further loss of physical function.
Type I Complex Regional Pain Syndrome chronic progressive disease characterized by severe pain, swelling and changes in the skin. The cause of this syndrome is currently unknown.
Although CRPS may follow injury and surgery, this is not always the case.
During the study, researchers looked at 106 patients suffering severe physical impairments from CRPS Type I, which does not involve nerve lesions (unlike Type II).
They found that almost all the patients improved significantly when subjected to a rehabilitation program involving graded pain exposure.
In fact, more than half the patients in the study recovered full physical movement, and none of the patients experienced adverse effects from this more aggressive approach.
While this “full on” approach doesn’t reduce the amount of pain associated with the condition, it does provide sufferers with a significant increase in mobility, function and quality of life.
CPRS can vary from joint stiffness and moderate pain in the arms or legs to paralysis and complete loss of function in more extreme cases.
The study appears in Clinical Rehabilitation, published by SAGE. (ANI)
Related Stories
- Botox shot can relieve chronic pain in people - Oct 26, 2009
- Chinese exercise Tai chi improves pain in arthritis patients - Oct 29, 2009
- Botox also helps relieve pain - Nov 10, 2009
- Brains of patients with baffling chronic pain are ''rewired'' - Nov 27, 2008
- Chinese exercise Tai chi improves pain in arthritis patients - Jun 02, 2009
- Persistent pain in younger people ages them by 20 years - Sep 17, 2009
- Yoga can reduce chronic low back pain - Nov 05, 2009
- Smoking can lead to bad back - Oct 24, 2009
- Exercise therapy the best bet for knee pain - Oct 21, 2009
- Vitamin D deficiency may worsen chronic pain - Mar 21, 2009
- adverse effects
- aggressive approach
- bethesda hospital
- chronic pain
- clinical rehabilitation
- complex regional pain syndrome
- cprs
- extreme cases
- free approach
- joint stiffness
- moderate pain
- nerve lesions
- paralysis
- physical impairments
- progressive disease
- regional pain syndrome
- rehabilitation medicine
- rehabilitation program
- severe pain
- study researchers
Posted in Health Science, |