A scoping review of the effectiveness of underwater treadmill exercise in clinical trials of chronic pain.

IF 1.5 Q4 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Scandinavian Journal of Pain Pub Date : 2025-01-16 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1515/sjpain-2024-0051
Michael Miglietta, Larah Maunder, Piera Rooke, Erin Gorchinsky, Sonia Keshavari, Griffin Douglas, Nicholas Held
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Abstract

Objective: The objective of this scoping review was to investigate the available literature on physical and quality of life (QoL) outcomes of underwater treadmill exercise trials in clinical chronic pain samples.

Methods: A scoping search of studies of the effectiveness of underwater treadmill exercise trials from 1947 to 2024 was conducted using the following databases: EMBASE, MEDLINE, SPORTDiscus, CINAHL, and Cochrane Reviews. To be included, studies were required to have included adult participants living with chronic pain (defined as pain lasting for 3 months or longer) who participated in an active underwater treadmill exercise intervention. No restrictions on pain diagnosis were applied. All clinical trials, including but not limited to randomized controlled trials (RCTs), feasibility trials, and pilot studies, were included in the search. Two independent reviewers determined whether studies met inclusion criteria, and a third reviewer resolved any disagreement on study inclusion.

Results: The initial search identified 2,209 studies: 314 articles were removed for duplications, 1,781 were removed because they did not meet inclusion criteria, and 113 were retained for full-text review. The full-text review yielded nine studies, all of which included samples consisting of participants with osteoarthritis. The following variables were investigated in the included studies to varying degrees: pain, QoL, mobility, balance, strength, and changes in gait kinematics. Multiple studies identified significant differences between control groups or pre-intervention groups and underwater treadmill groups or post-intervention groups in chronic pain, balance, mobility, strength, and QoL.

Conclusion: Findings suggest that underwater treadmill exercise leads to positive changes in chronic pain, balance, mobility, strength, and QoL. However, more studies, particularly RCTs with larger samples that include individuals with chronic pain conditions other than osteoarthritis, are warranted.

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水下跑步机运动在慢性疼痛临床试验中的有效性综述。
目的:本综述的目的是调查水下跑步机运动对临床慢性疼痛患者身体和生活质量(QoL)结果的现有文献。方法:对1947年至2024年水下跑步机运动试验有效性的研究进行范围搜索,使用以下数据库:EMBASE、MEDLINE、SPORTDiscus、CINAHL和Cochrane Reviews。被纳入的研究需要包括患有慢性疼痛(定义为持续3个月或更长时间的疼痛)的成年参与者,他们参加了积极的水下跑步机运动干预。对疼痛诊断没有限制。所有临床试验,包括但不限于随机对照试验(rct)、可行性试验和试点研究,均纳入检索。两名独立审稿人确定研究是否符合纳入标准,第三名审稿人解决对研究纳入的任何分歧。结果:最初的检索确定了2209项研究:314篇因重复而被删除,1781篇因不符合纳入标准而被删除,113篇保留为全文审查。全文综述产生了九项研究,所有这些研究都包括骨关节炎患者的样本。在纳入的研究中,对以下变量进行了不同程度的调查:疼痛、生活质量、活动能力、平衡、力量和步态运动学变化。多项研究发现,对照组或干预前组与水下跑步机组或干预后组在慢性疼痛、平衡、活动能力、力量和生活质量方面存在显著差异。结论:水下跑步机运动对慢性疼痛、平衡、活动、力量和生活质量有积极的影响。然而,更多的研究,特别是包括骨关节炎以外的慢性疼痛个体的大样本随机对照试验,是有必要的。
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来源期刊
Scandinavian Journal of Pain
Scandinavian Journal of Pain CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
6.20%
发文量
73
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