Goldfine Charlotte E, Wilson Jenna M, Kaithamattam Jenson, Hasdianda Mohammad Adrian, Mancey Kate, Rehding Alexander, Schreiber Kristin L, Chai Peter R, Weiner Scott G
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Department of Emergency Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
Brigham and Women's Hospital, Department of Anesthesiology, Boston, Massachusetts.
West J Emerg Med. 2025 Jun 25;26(4):1112-1119. doi: 10.5811/westjem.34871.
Acute musculoskeletal back pain is a frequent cause of emergency department (ED) visits, often with suboptimal relief from standard treatments. Recent evidence suggests listening to music may modulate pain and anxiety. In this pilot randomized controlled trial, we evaluated the impact of a brief session of patient-selected music vs noise cancellation on pain severity and anxiety in patients presenting to the ED with back pain.
Patients with acute back pain completed a baseline survey to assess demographics, medication information, and psychosocial factors. The ED patients were randomized to listen to self-selected music or to noise cancellation (control). Patients rated their pain and anxiety (0-10) before and immediately after the intervention. We used analyses of covariance to examine whether post-intervention pain and anxiety differed between the groups, while controlling for baseline trait pain catastrophizing. A mediation analysis was conducted to explore the role of post-intervention anxiety as a mediator of the group difference in post-intervention pain.
Forty patients were enrolled with an average age of 47.2 years (range 21 - 81). and 27 patients (68%) were female. At baseline, patients in the music group reported higher pain catastrophizing compared to patients in the noise cancellation group. There were no other group differences in baseline characteristics. Post-intervention, patients in the music group reported significantly lower anxiety (3.0 ± 0.7 vs 5.5 ± 0.7, P = 0.016) and pain severity (6.1 ± 0.4 vs.7.5 ± 0.4, P = 0.037) compared to the noise cancellation group. A mediation analysis showed that post-intervention anxiety partially mediated the association between intervention group (music vs noise cancellation) and post-intervention pain.
A brief session of self-selected music resulted in lower pain and anxiety scores than noise cancellation among patients with musculoskeletal back pain in the ED. Patients who listened to music reported lower post-intervention anxiety, which partially contributed to lower post-intervention pain severity.
急性肌肉骨骼性背痛是急诊科就诊的常见原因,标准治疗往往难以使其得到充分缓解。最近的证据表明,听音乐可能会调节疼痛和焦虑。在这项初步随机对照试验中,我们评估了一段患者自选音乐与噪音消除对因背痛前往急诊科就诊患者的疼痛严重程度和焦虑的影响。
急性背痛患者完成一项基线调查,以评估人口统计学、用药信息和社会心理因素。急诊科患者被随机分配聆听自选音乐或进行噪音消除(对照组)。患者在干预前和干预后立即对其疼痛和焦虑程度进行评分(0至10分)。我们使用协方差分析来检验干预后两组之间的疼痛和焦虑是否存在差异,同时控制基线特质性疼痛灾难化。进行中介分析以探讨干预后焦虑作为干预后疼痛组间差异中介因素的作用。
共招募了40名患者,平均年龄47.2岁(范围21至81岁),27名患者(68%)为女性。在基线时,音乐组患者报告的疼痛灾难化程度高于噪音消除组患者。基线特征方面没有其他组间差异。干预后,与噪音消除组相比,音乐组患者报告的焦虑程度显著更低(3.0±0.7对5.5±0.7,P = 0.016),疼痛严重程度也更低(6.1±0.4对7.5±0.4,P = 0.037)。中介分析表明,干预后焦虑部分介导了干预组(音乐组与噪音消除组)与干预后疼痛之间的关联。
在急诊科,对于肌肉骨骼性背痛患者,一段自选音乐比噪音消除能带来更低的疼痛和焦虑评分。听音乐的患者干预后焦虑程度更低,这部分导致了干预后疼痛严重程度更低。