Reiki for the Management of Neuropathic Pain
Status: | Terminated |
---|---|
Conditions: | Neurology |
Therapuetic Areas: | Neurology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - Any |
Updated: | 4/21/2016 |
Start Date: | May 2013 |
End Date: | March 2015 |
Reiki for the Management of Neuropathic Pain in Service Members With Extremity Trauma
This is a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, repeated measures study
with intention-to-treat that involves exposure to Reiki therapy or a placebo control
intervention for a total of six treatments, three treatments per week for two weeks, with a
2-week follow-up for the decrease of neuropathic pain in extremity trauma.
with intention-to-treat that involves exposure to Reiki therapy or a placebo control
intervention for a total of six treatments, three treatments per week for two weeks, with a
2-week follow-up for the decrease of neuropathic pain in extremity trauma.
Sixty participants will be randomized to either receive three 30-minute standardized
treatments per week for two weeks of Reiki therapy (n=30) or a placebo intervention (n=30).
All participants will complete the same outcome measures (Brief Pain Inventory, Neuropathic
Pain Scale, Patient Global Impression of Improvement Scale, Pittsburgh Quality of Sleep
Scale, and McGill Pain Questionnaire-SF) at established times. Any opioid and other
analgesic requirements will also be collected.
Aim 1: Test the efficacy of a 2-week course of Reiki therapy on pain outcomes (present,
average and worst pain intensity levels and perceptions of pain relief from the Brief Pain
Inventory (BPI) and Patient Global Impression of Improvement-PGI-I) compared to placebo
Reiki interventions in combat-injured service members with major limb trauma experiencing
neuropathic pain.
Aim 2: Examine effects of a 2-week course of Reiki therapy compared to placebo Reiki
interventions on the quality of sleep measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI),
pain interference (BPI), character and quality of pain (Neuropathic Pain Scale and McGill
Pain Questionnaire-Short Form) in combat-injured service members with major limb trauma
experiencing neuropathic pain.
Aim 3: Describe the differences in pattern of responses to Reiki therapy and placebo Reiki
interventions for pain outcomes (pain intensity, perception of relief and PGI-I) based on
neuropathic pain type, pain duration, and the presence or absence of a diagnosis of PTSD.
treatments per week for two weeks of Reiki therapy (n=30) or a placebo intervention (n=30).
All participants will complete the same outcome measures (Brief Pain Inventory, Neuropathic
Pain Scale, Patient Global Impression of Improvement Scale, Pittsburgh Quality of Sleep
Scale, and McGill Pain Questionnaire-SF) at established times. Any opioid and other
analgesic requirements will also be collected.
Aim 1: Test the efficacy of a 2-week course of Reiki therapy on pain outcomes (present,
average and worst pain intensity levels and perceptions of pain relief from the Brief Pain
Inventory (BPI) and Patient Global Impression of Improvement-PGI-I) compared to placebo
Reiki interventions in combat-injured service members with major limb trauma experiencing
neuropathic pain.
Aim 2: Examine effects of a 2-week course of Reiki therapy compared to placebo Reiki
interventions on the quality of sleep measured by the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI),
pain interference (BPI), character and quality of pain (Neuropathic Pain Scale and McGill
Pain Questionnaire-Short Form) in combat-injured service members with major limb trauma
experiencing neuropathic pain.
Aim 3: Describe the differences in pattern of responses to Reiki therapy and placebo Reiki
interventions for pain outcomes (pain intensity, perception of relief and PGI-I) based on
neuropathic pain type, pain duration, and the presence or absence of a diagnosis of PTSD.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Be Active, Reserve, or National Guard with previous deployment(s) to OIF, OEF, or OND
- Be age 18 years or older
- Have ability to read and understand consent forms and study documents
- Have sustained at least one traumatic combat extremity injury defined as: single or
both arm or leg, above or below knee amputation, mangled limb(s)
- Report, from a major traumatic extremity injury, an average and worst pain level ≥ 5
(numeric rating scale of 0 to 10) for at least one of three days prior to enrollment
- Be receiving a stable pain medication regimen defined as a regimen that may include
multimodal analgesia with opioids, anticonvulsants and/or antidepressants for
neuropathic pain in relatively stable doses with no more than a 10 to 20% increase
over the past week prior to enrollment
- Have a cognitive performance evaluation that is consistent with an understanding of
the proposed study as assessed by a "teach back" process
- Be receiving a minimum of two hours of physical therapy per day
Exclusion Criteria:
- Moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) as documented on the standardized
evaluation completed by TBI Service providers
- Active moderate to severe psychological distress or psychiatric condition such as
active psychosis, suicidal or homicidal ideation as documented, on the standardized
psychological evaluation completed by a behavioral health psychiatrist
- Pregnancy
- Any medical condition that in the opinion of the participant's health care provider
or PI has the potential to interfere with the effects of Reiki treatments
- Being pre-scheduled for additional surgeries or major painful and activity limiting
procedures during the participant's participation in the study
- Received Reiki therapy treatment within the last three months.
We found this trial at
1
site
8901 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, Maryland 20889
Bethesda, Maryland 20889
(301) 295-4000
Walter Reed National Military Medical Center The Walter Reed National Military Medical Center is one...
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