Vieira Ludmilla Maria Souza Mattos de Araújo, de Andrade Marcela Alves, Sato Tatiana de Oliveira
Physiotherapy Department, Federal University of São Carlos, São Carlos, SP, Brazil.
Digit Health. 2023 Mar 20;9:20552076231164242. doi: 10.1177/20552076231164242. eCollection 2023 Jan-Dec.
Alternative measures for minimizing musculoskeletal pain, such as telerehabilitation, can be implemented in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The aim of the present overview was to examine evidence from systematic reviews of telerehabilitation for managing musculoskeletal pain.
This study was conducted following the PRISMA recommendations. Searches were conducted of the Pubmed/Medline, Scopus, Cochrane Library, Web of Science and Embase databases for review articles published from the inception of the database to July 2022. To be included, the studies needed to be a systematic review, include any type of telerehabilitation and present any outcome related to musculoskeletal pain. Studies not available in English were excluded. Theses, dissertations, letters, conference abstracts and narrative reviews were also excluded. The methodological quality of the reviews was appraised using the Assessing the Methodological Quality of Systematic Reviews criteria. Data extraction was performed by two reviewers and included the characterization of the clinical condition and telerehabilitation program, main outcomes, method for appraising the methodological quality of the primary studies, results and quality of evidence.
The search led to the retrieval of 390 potentially eligible studies and 16 systematic reviews were included in this overview. Eleven reviews had meta-analyses and most had high methodological quality. Five of six systematic reviews reported evidence supporting the telehealth intervention for chronic pain conditions; and two of three high-quality systematic reviews reported the absence of evidence for non-specific low back pain.
This overview of systematic reviews enables a better understanding of the characteristics of telerehabilitation programs, provides information for use in clinical practice and describes gaps in the research that need to be filled.
在2019冠状病毒病大流行的背景下,可以采用远程康复等替代措施来尽量减少肌肉骨骼疼痛。
本综述的目的是研究远程康复治疗肌肉骨骼疼痛的系统评价证据。
本研究按照系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)建议进行。在PubMed/Medline、Scopus、Cochrane图书馆、科学网和Embase数据库中进行检索,以查找从数据库建立到2022年7月发表的综述文章。要纳入研究,必须是系统评价,包括任何类型的远程康复,并呈现与肌肉骨骼疼痛相关的任何结果。非英文的研究被排除。论文、学位论文、信件、会议摘要和叙述性综述也被排除。使用评估系统评价方法学质量标准对综述的方法学质量进行评估。由两名评审员进行数据提取,包括临床状况和远程康复计划的特征、主要结果、评估原始研究方法学质量的方法、结果和证据质量。
检索得到390项潜在符合条件的研究,本综述纳入了16项系统评价。11项综述有Meta分析,且大多数方法学质量较高。六项系统评价中有五项报告了支持远程医疗干预慢性疼痛状况的证据;三项高质量系统评价中有两项报告没有证据支持非特异性腰痛。
本系统评价综述有助于更好地了解远程康复计划的特点,为临床实践提供信息,并描述了研究中需要填补的空白。