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Bright Light Treatment At Home To Manage Chronic Pain In U.S. Veterans

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Rush

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Low Back Pain

Treatments

Device: Bright light

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT02373189
R34AT008347 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
13082603

Details and patient eligibility

About

Nearly 50% of U.S. veterans report they experience pain on a regular basis. This chronic pain often co-occurs with other disorders including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety and insomnia. A common approach to treating chronic pain is opioid analgesics, which are not always effective, and increasingly associated with abuse and misuse. Thus, there is an urgent need to develop readily available, safe, and practical complementary nonpharmacological approaches to manage chronic pain in U.S. veterans. Chronic pain is a multidimensional phenomenon, inter-related with many factors, including negative mood and poor sleep. The central circadian clock, in the suprachiasmatic nucleus in the hypothalamus, is well recognized to regulate both mood and sleep, and even small delays (shifts later) in circadian/sleep timing are associated with depression and disrupted sleep. These results suggests that later circadian/sleep timing may be a modifiable risk factor for pain. Thus, a self-administered morning bright light treatment at home may be a potentially efficacious adjunctive strategy for managing chronic pain. This R34 grant will develop a morning bright light treatment to help manage chronic pain and improve PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety and sleep in U.S. veterans. Patients will have 7 baseline days at home, followed by a baseline pain sensitivity assessment and home circadian phase assessment (dim light melatonin onset). Following an instructional home visit, patients will then self-administer morning bright light treatment for 6 days, followed by reassessments of pain sensitivity and circadian phase. Assessments will be repeated after another 7 days of morning bright light treatment. Pain, mood and sleep (wrist actigraphy) will be assessed daily throughout baseline and treatment. Pain, mood and sleep will also be rated by veterans daily during a 1 month follow up after cessation of light treatment. This study will determine the feasibility, acceptability and efficacy of bright light treatment in a sample of U.S. veterans experiencing chronic low back pain.

Full description

Almost 50% of U.S. veterans report they experience pain on a regular basis. This chronic pain often co-occurs with other disorders including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety and insomnia. A common approach to treating chronic pain is opioid analgesics, which are not always effective, and increasingly associated with abuse and misuse. Thus, there is an urgent need to develop readily available, safe, and practical complementary nonpharmacological approaches to manage chronic pain in U.S. veterans. Chronic pain is a multidimensional phenomenon, inter-related with many factors, including negative mood and poor sleep. The central circadian clock, in the suprachiasmatic nucleus in the hypothalamus, is well recognized to regulate both mood and sleep, and even small delays (shifts later) in circadian/sleep timing are associated with depression and disrupted sleep. These results suggests that later circadian/sleep timing may be a modifiable risk factor for pain. Thus, a self-administered morning bright light treatment at home may be a potentially efficacious adjunctive strategy for managing chronic pain. This R34 grant will develop a morning bright light treatment to help manage chronic pain and improve PTSD symptoms, depression, anxiety and sleep in U.S. veterans. Patients will have 7 baseline days at home, followed by a baseline pain sensitivity assessment and home circadian phase assessment (dim light melatonin onset). Following an instructional home visit, patients will then self-administer morning bright light treatment for 6 days, followed by reassessments of pain sensitivity and circadian phase. Assessments will be repeated after another 7 days of morning bright light treatment. Pain, mood and sleep (wrist actigraphy) will be assessed daily throughout baseline and treatment. Pain, mood and sleep will also be rated by veterans daily during a 1 month follow up after cessation of light treatment. This study will determine the feasibility, acceptability and efficacy of bright light treatment in a sample of U.S. veterans experiencing chronic low back pain.

Enrollment

37 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. U.S. veteran
  2. musculoskeletal pain of the lower back and/or leg pain stemming from degenerative disk disease, spinal stenosis, or disk herniation (radiculopathy subcategory), or muscular or ligamentous strain (chronic myofascial pain subcategory) verified with written confirmation from physician/medical record
  3. age between 18 and 70 years
  4. live within 1.5 hours drive of Rush University Medical Center

Exclusion criteria

  1. inability to understand English well enough to complete questionnaires or to participate;
  2. unable to travel to the lab

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

37 participants in 1 patient group

Bright light
Experimental group
Description:
Participants received morning bright light.
Treatment:
Device: Bright light

Trial documents
3

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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