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The aim of the study is to evaluate the influence of verbal suggestion on the therapeutic effect of the joint manipulation of the lumbar spine in patients with chronic non-specific low back pain in relation to the pain level, stress, disability, function, sleepiness, tissue temperature and selected blood biochemical markers.
The study participants will be randomly assigned (sealed allocation envelopes) to the following groups:
The study will mainly consist of the three stages, i.e. before the intervention, immediately after the intervention and 24 hours later.
Full description
Pain is complex in nature and is closely related to the secretion of biochemical markers such as cortisol, serotonin and oxytocin. Higher levels of inflammatory markers, cytokines and chemokines have been found in patients with low back pain, which ultimately affect the clinical manifestations observed in the patients.
One of the methods of physiotherapeutic treatment of spinal disorders involving manual diagnostic and therapeutic techniques is manual therapy. In the therapy, among others, joint manipulation techniques are used. However, the mechanisms underlying the effects of the joint manipulation on the body have not been fully explained. Undoubtedly, one of the main mechanisms of action of manual therapy is pain modulation.
In recent years, research has been increasingly focusing on manipulation in a psychological context, including mechanisms of fear-avoidance, pain catastrophizing and kinesiophobia. Furthermore, manipulation can affect immune and endocrine system responses.
One of the significant non-specific effects accompanying any medical procedure is a placebo effect. The way health care professionals discuss, describe and inform patients about characteristic symptoms of a given disease its prevention, diagnosis and treatment, influences the patients' feelings and expectations, which in turn affect their psycho-biological reactions, subjective perception and treatment outcomes.
The appropriate choice of words by clinicians influences patients' responses to medical treatments and procedures, whether active or sham. The way in which information about the outcome of a treatment is communicated to patients can induce the reinforcing effects of a given treatment (placebo) or reverse the clinically proven effects of an active treatment, or even increase its adverse outcomes in the form of a nocebo effect.
The aim of the study is to evaluate the influence of verbal suggestion on the therapeutic effect of the joint manipulation of the lumbar spine in patients with chronic non-specific low back pain in relation to the pain level, stress, disability, function, sleepiness, tissue temperature and selected blood biochemical markers.
Research questions:
The participants will be selected for the study from the group of students from John Paul II University in Biała Podlaska, Poland. The participation in the study will be voluntary.
The study will mainly consist of the three stages, i.e. before the intervention, immediately after the intervention and 24 hours later. Once, before the intervention, a scale will be used for the subjective assessment of the expectations for the treatment outcomes based on the GRoC methodology. The other research tools will be used in two stages: an information questionnaire (before the intervention and 24 hours after the intervention) and a scale for the subjective assessment of the treatment outcomes based on the GRoC methodology (immediately after the intervention and 24 hours later).
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64 participants in 3 patient groups
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Joanna Baj-Korpak, Ph.D.; Kamil Zaworski, Ph.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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