Harvie Daniel S, Hillier Susan, Madden Victoria J, Smith Ross T, Broecker Markus, Meulders Ann, Moseley G Lorimer
D.S. Harvie, PhD, MMusc&SportsPhysio, BPhysio(Hons), Sansom Institute for Health Research, The University of South Australia, GPO Box 247, Adelaide, South Australia 5001, Australia, and Menzies Health Institute QLD, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia.
S. Hillier, PhD, Sansom Institute for Health Research, The University of South Australia.
Phys Ther. 2016 May;96(5):671-8. doi: 10.2522/ptj.20150210. Epub 2015 Sep 24.
Proprioceptive imprecision is believed to contribute to persistent pain. Detecting imprecision in order to study or treat it remains challenging given the limitations of current tests.
The aim of this study was to determine whether proprioceptive imprecision could be detected in people with neck pain by testing their ability to identify incongruence between true head motion and a false visual reference using the Proprioception Incongruence Detection (PID) Test.
A cross-sectional study was conducted.
Twenty-four people with neck pain and 24 matched controls repeatedly rotated to specific markers within a virtual world and indicated if their true head rotation was more or less than the rotation suggested by the visual feedback. Visual feedback was manipulated at 6 corrections, ranging from 60% of true movement to 140% of true movement. A standard repositioning error (RPE) test as undertaken for comparison.
Healthy controls were better able to detect incongruence between vision and true head rotation (X̅=75.6%, SD=8.5%) than people with neck pain were (X̅=69.6%, SD=12.7%). The RPE test scores were not different between groups. The PID Test score related to self-reported pain intensity but did not relate to RPE test score.
Causality cannot be established from this cross-sectional study, and further work refining the PID Test is needed for it to offer clinical utility.
Proprioceptive precision for neck movement appears worse in people with neck pain than in those without neck pain, and the extent of the deficit appears to be related to usual pain severity. The PID Test appears to be a more sensitive test than the RPE test and is likely to be useful for assessment of proprioceptive function in research and clinical settings.
本体感觉不精确被认为会导致持续性疼痛。鉴于当前测试的局限性,检测不精确性以进行研究或治疗仍然具有挑战性。
本研究的目的是通过使用本体感觉不一致检测(PID)测试来测试颈部疼痛患者识别真实头部运动与虚假视觉参考之间不一致的能力,以确定是否可以检测到本体感觉不精确性。
进行了一项横断面研究。
24名颈部疼痛患者和24名匹配的对照组在虚拟世界中反复旋转至特定标记,并指出他们的真实头部旋转是否大于或小于视觉反馈所建议的旋转。视觉反馈在6种校正水平下进行操纵,范围从真实运动的60%到真实运动的140%。同时进行标准重新定位误差(RPE)测试以作比较。
健康对照组比颈部疼痛患者更能检测到视觉与真实头部旋转之间的不一致(平均值=75.6%,标准差=8.5%)(平均值=69.6%,标准差=12.7%)。两组之间的RPE测试分数没有差异。PID测试分数与自我报告的疼痛强度相关,但与RPE测试分数无关。
无法从这项横断面研究中确定因果关系,需要进一步完善PID测试才能使其具有临床实用性。
颈部疼痛患者的颈部运动本体感觉精度似乎比无颈部疼痛的人更差,且缺陷程度似乎与通常的疼痛严重程度有关。PID测试似乎比RPE测试更敏感,可能有助于在研究和临床环境中评估本体感觉功能。