Hanley Adam W, Davis Allison, Worts Phillip, Pratscher Steven
Brain Science and Symptom Management Center, College of Nursing, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA.
Department of Orthopaedics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
J Behav Med. 2025 Apr;48(2):385-393. doi: 10.1007/s10865-024-00548-5. Epub 2025 Feb 4.
Pain is a common medical experience, and patient access to pain management could be improved with novel intervention formats. Emerging evidence indicates brief, asynchronous, single-session interventions delivered in the clinic waiting room can improve patient outcomes, but only a few treatment modalities have been investigated to date. Breathwork is a promising approach to managing acute clinical pain that could be delivered asynchronously in the clinic waiting room. However, the direct impact of a breathwork intervention (e.g., brief cyclic sighing) on patients' pain and psychological distress (e.g., anxiety and depression symptoms) while waiting in the clinic waiting room remains unexamined. This single-site, pilot, randomized controlled trial examined the impact of a 4-minute, asynchronous, cyclic sighing intervention on participants' acute clinical symptoms in the x-ray waiting room of a walk-in orthopedic clinic relative to a time- and attention-matched injury management control condition. Pain unpleasantness, pain intensity, anxiety symptoms, and depression symptoms were measured in the study. Participants receiving the cyclic sighing intervention reported significantly less pain unpleasantness and pain intensity while waiting for an x-ray relative to controls. Anxiety symptoms and depression symptoms were not found to differ by condition. Results from this RCT indicate a brief, asynchronous, cyclic sighing intervention may be capable of quickly decreasing pain in the waiting room. Continued investigation is now needed to determine if embedding brief, asynchronous, cyclic sighing interventions in clinic waiting rooms has the potential to help people experiencing acute pain feel better faster. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATIONS: NCT06292793.
疼痛是一种常见的医学体验,采用新型干预形式可改善患者获得疼痛管理的情况。新出现的证据表明,在诊所候诊室进行简短、异步、单次的干预可以改善患者的治疗效果,但迄今为止仅对少数治疗方式进行了研究。呼吸练习是一种有前景的管理急性临床疼痛的方法,可以在诊所候诊室异步进行。然而,呼吸练习干预(如简短的周期性叹气)对患者在诊所候诊室等待时的疼痛和心理困扰(如焦虑和抑郁症状)的直接影响仍未得到研究。这项单中心、试点、随机对照试验研究了在一家无需预约的骨科诊所的X光候诊室,与时间和注意力匹配的损伤管理对照条件相比,4分钟的异步周期性叹气干预对参与者急性临床症状的影响。研究中测量了疼痛不适感、疼痛强度、焦虑症状和抑郁症状。与对照组相比,接受周期性叹气干预的参与者在等待X光检查时报告的疼痛不适感和疼痛强度明显更低。未发现焦虑症状和抑郁症状因干预条件而异。这项随机对照试验的结果表明,简短、异步的周期性叹气干预可能能够迅速减轻候诊室中的疼痛。现在需要继续进行研究,以确定在诊所候诊室引入简短、异步的周期性叹气干预是否有可能帮助急性疼痛患者更快地感觉好转。临床试验注册号:NCT06292793。