Ma Bingjie, Zhang Libo, Ji Yun, Huang Xuehua, Yao Luandi, Cheng Wei, Hu Li, Lu Xuejing, Ma Ke
Department of Pain Management, Xinhua Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China.
CAS Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Digit Health. 2025 Jan 6;11:20552076241308703. doi: 10.1177/20552076241308703. eCollection 2025 Jan-Dec.
To overcome the challenge of psychotherapist scarcity in applying pain psychotherapy in clinical practice, we developed a virtual reality (VR) program delivering weeks of pain psychotherapy without psychotherapists, with a focus on minimizing the risk of motion sickness.
We conducted a single-arm pilot study to assess the efficacy and motion sickness associated with a VR session delivering guided imagery and breathing techniques selected from the initial course of our VR program, involving patients suffering from various acute and chronic pain.
Patients underwent a 15-min VR session. Pain-related and anxiety ratings using a 0-10 numerical rating scale were collected pre-, during-, post-VR and in 6-h follow-up. Motion sickness symptoms were assessed using Simulator Sickness Questionnaire pre- and post-VR.
Patients ( = 73) reported their perceived pain intensity and anxiety reduced significantly from pre- to post-VR by 22.9% and 45.0% (all < 0.0001), respectively. Such modulatory effects of VR in pain perception and anxiety persisted at 30 min, 1 h, 2 h, and 6 h post-VR (all < 0.0001). The pre-post beneficial effects of VR were independent from patients' demographic characteristics and their pain duration. Importantly, only six patients (8.2%) had post-VR motion sickness symptoms, and only one patient reported moderate level of severity.
These findings suggest the selected VR session delivering pain psychotherapeutic techniques may be effective and tolerable for patients with varying pain conditions, which provides initial evidence for the development of future randomized controlled trials of the complete VR program.
为了克服心理治疗师短缺这一在临床实践中应用疼痛心理治疗的挑战,我们开发了一个虚拟现实(VR)程序,该程序无需心理治疗师即可提供为期数周的疼痛心理治疗,重点是将晕动病风险降至最低。
我们进行了一项单臂试点研究,以评估与一次VR疗程相关的疗效和晕动病情况,该疗程提供从我们VR程序的初始课程中选取的引导式意象和呼吸技巧,涉及患有各种急慢性疼痛的患者。
患者接受了15分钟的VR疗程。在VR前、VR期间、VR后以及6小时随访时,使用0至10数字评分量表收集与疼痛相关的评分和焦虑评分。使用模拟器晕动病问卷在VR前后评估晕动病症状。
患者(n = 73)报告,从VR前到VR后,他们感知到的疼痛强度和焦虑分别显著降低了22.9%和45.0%(均P < 0.0001)。VR在疼痛感知和焦虑方面的这种调节作用在VR后30分钟、1小时、2小时和6小时持续存在(均P < 0.0001)。VR前后的有益效果与患者的人口统计学特征及其疼痛持续时间无关。重要的是,只有6名患者(8.2%)有VR后的晕动病症状,只有1名患者报告症状严重程度为中度。
这些发现表明,所选择的提供疼痛心理治疗技术的VR疗程对于不同疼痛状况的患者可能是有效且可耐受的,这为未来完整VR程序的随机对照试验的开展提供了初步证据。