Biosound Therapy as a treatment for long COVID patients: A pre-post pilot study

IF 1.9 4区 医学 Q3 INTEGRATIVE & COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE Explore-The Journal of Science and Healing Pub Date : 2024-04-12 DOI:10.1016/j.explore.2024.04.004
Colleenia Korapatti , Lauren Vera , Keith Miller
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Abstract

Background

43 % of people who are diagnosed with COVID-19 will experience persistent symptoms, also known as “long COVID,” which lasts past the recovery of the acute infection. Long COVID symptoms overlap with symptoms that the Biosound Therapy System (BTS) has been shown to improve. The BTS is a multimodal treatment that includes biofeedback, vibroacoustic therapy synchronized with music that plays binaural beats, and video content. This study aimed to determine feasibility for a future full-scale Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) and explore the impact of the BTS on long COVID symptoms.

Methods

This pre-post pilot study was conducted in an outpatient mental health clinic. Adults aged 20–65 years old with persistent COVID-19 symptoms were screened and randomly assigned to the intervention or control group. The intervention group was given 8 Biosound Therapy sessions during a period of 4 weeks. All participants were assessed at baseline and at post-intervention using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale (GAD-7), Cambridge Brain Sciences (CBS) tasks, and the COVID-19 Persistent Symptom Questionnaire. The feasibility outcomes were recruitment rates, retention rates, and open-ended questions about participants’ experiences.

Results

15 participants enrolled in the study and 13 completed the study (9 intervention, 4 control). Trial recruitment ended prematurely due to the emergence of the Omicron variant of COVID-19. Participants responded to open-ended questions with only positive remarks and made no comments on the study not being feasible. A Wilcoxon signed-rank test indicated that compared to baseline, participants in the intervention group had significant improvement in their GAD-7 score, PHQ9 score, 2 Cambridge Brain Science tasks (“Odd” and “Double Trouble”), fatigue, and difficulties in concentrating or remembering (p < 0.05; 95 % CI).

Conclusion

The intervention group showed promising improvement without reported side effects. A full-scale RCT is feasible as long as the recruitment setting is changed to a location that allows access to more patients with long COVID. Results were limited due to the small sample size; therefore, a full-scale trial is needed.

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将生物声波疗法作为治疗长期 COVID 患者的一种方法:前后试验研究
43% 的 COVID-19 患者会出现持续性症状,也称为 "长 COVID",持续时间超过急性感染的恢复期。长COVID症状与生物声波治疗系统(BTS)可改善的症状重叠。生物声治疗系统是一种多模式治疗方法,包括生物反馈、与双耳节拍音乐同步的振动声治疗和视频内容。本研究旨在确定未来全面开展随机对照试验(RCT)的可行性,并探索 BTS 对长期 COVID 症状的影响。该研究在一家精神健康门诊进行。年龄在 20-65 岁之间、有持续 COVID-19 症状的成年人接受了筛查,并被随机分配到干预组或对照组。干预组在 4 周内接受 8 次生物声疗法治疗。所有参与者在基线和干预后均接受了患者健康问卷(PHQ-9)、广泛性焦虑症 7 项量表(GAD-7)、剑桥脑科学(CBS)任务和 COVID-19 持续症状问卷的评估。可行性结果包括招募率、保留率和有关参与者经历的开放式问题。15 名参与者参加了研究,13 人完成了研究(9 人干预,4 人对照)。由于 COVID-19 的 Omicron 变体出现,试验招募提前结束。参与者在回答开放式问题时只给出了积极的评价,没有对研究的不可行性提出任何意见。Wilcoxon符号秩检验表明,与基线相比,干预组的参与者在GAD-7评分、PHQ9评分、2项剑桥脑科学任务("奇数 "和 "双重麻烦")、疲劳以及集中注意力或记忆困难方面均有显著改善(< 0.05; 95 % CI)。干预组显示出良好的改善效果,且无副作用报告。只要将招募地点改为能接触到更多患有长期 COVID 的患者的地方,就可以进行全面的 RCT 研究。由于样本量较小,结果有限;因此,需要进行全面试验。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Explore-The Journal of Science and Healing
Explore-The Journal of Science and Healing 医学-全科医学与补充医学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
8.30%
发文量
179
审稿时长
25 days
期刊介绍: EXPLORE: The Journal of Science & Healing addresses the scientific principles behind, and applications of, evidence-based healing practices from a wide variety of sources, including conventional, alternative, and cross-cultural medicine. It is an interdisciplinary journal that explores the healing arts, consciousness, spirituality, eco-environmental issues, and basic science as all these fields relate to health.
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