Talbot Laura A, Wu Lin, Ramirez Vanessa J, Bradley David F, Scallan Ross, Zuber Pilar, Morrell Christopher H, Enochs Kayla, Fagan Mathias, Hillner Jesse, Metter E Jeffrey
Department of Neurology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, College of Medicine, Memphis, TN 38163, USA.
Military Performance Division, U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Natick, MA 01760, USA.
Mil Med. 2025 Jun 30;190(7-8):e1420-e1431. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usae541.
Musculoskeletal (MSK) injury can negatively affect service members by compromising job performance and readiness. These injuries can impact the service member's physical health, functional abilities, and quality of life (QoL). Rehabilitation therapies for MSK injuries can reduce these impacts. One approach is home use rehabilitative therapy, usable during deployment and at home stations. The purpose of this updated systematic review with meta-analysis was to broaden our scope of pain/symptoms, disability, and QoL as outcome measures for nonpharmaceutical MSK therapies in a military population versus controls.
An updated systematic literature search was conducted from inception to September 2022 using electronic databases. From 2790 retrievals, 22 reports were identified from 21 randomized or nonrandomized control trials. Interventions included exercise, electrotherapy, bracing, and other devices compared to a standard control treatment. Outcomes for MSK pain/symptoms, disability, and QoL were summarized as (1) standardized change from baseline for both intervention and control by time and (2) standardized mean differences (SMDs) in the time change between the intervention and control.
Relative to baseline, pain improved during treatment and follow-up (P < .0001) with differences between intervention and control groups (P < .0001) but no significant interactions between group and time (P = .11). Overall, interventions showed modest (0.33 SMD, 95% CI, 0.11 to 0.54) improvement relative to controls across body regions and time. On average, disability exhibited an SMD of 0.12 (95% CI, -0.20 to 0.44) across all measures with substantial heterogeneity (I2 = 0.93). Time (P = .02) but not intervention (P = .87) was a significant moderator with no clear pattern of change over time and no time by group interaction (P = .84). Quality of life had an overall modest effect with an SMD of 0.10 (95% CI, -0.04 to 0.24) with no evidence supporting a difference between the intervention and control groups (P = .10) and no significant interaction between time and group (P = .41). The QoL measures were primarily derived using the Short Form Health Survey (SF12/36), which provide a mental and physical component summary score. For the mental component, there was either no change or a small decline during the study (P(time) = .80), with a difference between the intervention and control (P = .04) but no interaction between groups over time (P = .40). For the physical component scale, there was improvement during the study (P = .01), with the intervention showing better improvement than the control (P = .005), with no interaction between the time and treatment/control group (P = .80). The report considers responses by region and individual treatments.
This analysis demonstrated modest improvement in pain and physical well-being with therapy, with low certainty across diverse military cohorts. The impact on overall health-related disability and QoL was limited, with little change in mental well-being. The substantial heterogeneity and low certainty across diverse military cohorts limit generalizability, suggesting that further research in homogeneous environments is important for guiding clinical decisions. The study's findings suggest that nonpharmacological home use interventions may offer modest improvements in pain relief, particularly early in treatment, and in strength and function, according to our previous report. These interventions could complement standard care, providing options that may benefit service members during deployment and at home.
肌肉骨骼(MSK)损伤会影响军人的工作表现和战备状态,对其产生负面影响。这些损伤会影响军人的身体健康、功能能力和生活质量(QoL)。MSK损伤的康复治疗可以减轻这些影响。一种方法是在家中使用康复治疗,可在部署期间和驻地使用。本更新的系统评价及荟萃分析的目的是扩大我们对疼痛/症状、残疾和生活质量的研究范围,将其作为军事人群与对照组非药物MSK治疗的结局指标。
从数据库建立之初至2022年9月进行了一次更新的系统文献检索。从2790篇检索文献中,从21项随机或非随机对照试验中确定了22份报告。干预措施包括运动、电疗法、支具和其他设备,并与标准对照治疗进行比较。MSK疼痛/症状、残疾和生活质量的结局总结为:(1)干预组和对照组随时间从基线的标准化变化;(2)干预组和对照组在时间变化上的标准化平均差异(SMD)。
相对于基线,治疗期间和随访期间疼痛有所改善(P <.0001),干预组和对照组之间存在差异(P <.0001),但组间和时间之间无显著交互作用(P =.11)。总体而言,与对照组相比,干预措施在身体各部位和不同时间均显示出适度改善(SMD为0.33,95%CI为0.11至0.54)。平均而言,所有测量指标的残疾SMD为0.12(95%CI为-0.20至0.44),存在显著异质性(I2 = 0.93)。时间(P =.02)而非干预措施(P =.87)是一个显著的调节因素,随时间没有明确的变化模式,且组间和时间之间没有交互作用(P =.84)。生活质量总体影响适度,SMD为0.10(95%CI为-0.04至0.24),没有证据支持干预组和对照组之间存在差异(P =.10),且时间和组间没有显著交互作用(P =.41)。生活质量测量主要使用简短健康调查问卷(SF12/36)得出,该问卷提供了心理和身体成分的总结得分。对于心理成分,研究期间要么没有变化,要么略有下降(P(时间)=.80),干预组和对照组之间存在差异(P =.04),但随时间组间没有交互作用(P =.40)。对于身体成分量表,研究期间有所改善(P =.01),干预组的改善优于对照组(P =.005),时间与治疗/对照组之间没有交互作用(P =.80)。报告考虑了按区域和个体治疗的反应。
该分析表明,治疗可使疼痛和身体状况适度改善,但不同军事队列的确定性较低。对总体健康相关残疾和生活质量的影响有限,心理健康变化不大。不同军事队列中存在的显著异质性和低确定性限制了结果的普遍性,这表明在同质环境中进行进一步研究对于指导临床决策很重要。根据我们之前的报告,研究结果表明非药物家庭干预可能在缓解疼痛方面,特别是在治疗早期,以及在力量和功能方面提供适度改善。这些干预措施可以补充标准护理,提供可能使军人在部署期间和驻地受益的选择。