Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06040866

Pain Neuroscience Education and Biomedical Pain Education in Primary Dysmenorrhea

Effects of Pain Neuroscience Education or Biomedical Pain Education With Exercise Training in Primary Dysmenorrhea: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
38 (actual)
Sponsor
Hacettepe University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of this study was to compare the effects of biomedical pain education and pain neuroscience education, in addition to routine exercise training, on menstrual pain parameters (pain severity and duration, analgesic use), menstrual stress, somatosensory function, pain catastrophizing, pain beliefs, anxiety/depressive symptom level and quality of life in healthy individuals with primary dysmenorrhea.The design of the study is parallel group, randomized study. Individuals will be randomly assigned to one of the pain neuroscience education or biomedical pain education research arms. In the literature, there is no study comparing the effects of pain neuroscience education and biomedical pain education in primary dysmenorrhea, which is a problem that affects women's lives significantly. It is important to reveal the effects of different pain trainings for effective pain management in primary dysmenorrhea.

Detailed description

The aim of this study was to compare the effects of biomedical pain education and pain neuroscience education, in addition to routine exercise training, on menstrual pain parameters (pain severity and duration, analgesic use), menstrual stress, somatosensory function, pain catastrophizing, pain beliefs, anxiety/depressive symptom level and quality of life in healthy individuals with primary dysmenorrhea. The design of the study is parallel group, randomized study. The study sample consists of healthy individuals aged 18 years and older with primary dysmenorrhea symptoms. Individuals will be randomly assigned to one of the two research arms. In addition to the exercise training, which includes stretching and relaxation exercises routinely used in the field of physiotherapy and rehabilitation in primary dysmenorrhea, the patients in the first research arm will be given pain neuroscience education once a week for 2 weeks. In the second research arm, in addition to the exercise training that includes stretching and relaxation exercises routinely applied in the field of physiotherapy and rehabilitation in primary dysmenorrhea, biomedical pain education will be given once a week for 2 weeks. Participants will be evaluated in terms of descriptive measurements and outcome measures 3 times in total, before the applications, immediately after the end of the application period, and 3 months after the end of the applications. The primary outcome measurement parameter of the study was determined as the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) score, which is used to determine the severity of menstrual pain. Secondary outcome measures are menstrual stress level to be evaluated with the Menstrual Distress Questionnaire, somatosensory function status to be evaluated with the Central Sensitization Inventory, pain catastrophizing state to be evaluated with the Menstrual Pain Specific Pain Catastrophizing Scale, pain beliefs status to be assessed with the Pain Beliefs Questionnaire, anxiety/depressive symptom level to be evaluated with Depression Anxiety Stress Scales-21 (DASS-21), quality of life to be evaluated with World Health Organization Quality of Life Scale-Short Form and perception of change to be evaluated by 5-point likert scale. Sample size calculation was performed with G\*Power version 3.1 based on previous study results. In the one-way hypothesis design, it was determined that a total of 32 individuals, 16 individuals in each group, should be included in the study in order to reach 80% power with the calculated effect size difference Cohen's d=0.9 and α=0.05 type 1 error. Considering that there might be a 20% loss of individuals during the study, it was decided to include a total of 38 individuals in the study. In the literature, there is no study comparing the effects of pain neuroscience education and biomedical pain education in primary dysmenorrhea, which is a problem that affects women's lives significantly. It is important to reveal the effects of different pain trainings for effective pain management in primary dysmenorrhea.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERExercise trainingExercise training will be applied in the non-menstrual period during 2 menstrual cycles as stretching and relaxation exercises. Stretching exercises will include general stretching and specific stretching exercises and will take approximately 20 minutes in total. After the stretching exercises, relaxation exercise will be performed with diaphragmatic breathing for 10 minutes. The exercises will be performed with music accompanied by a physiotherapist once a week, and it will be recommended to do the exercises as a home program for 2 sessions a week.
OTHERPain neuroscience educationParticipants in the first research arm will be given pain neuroscience education once a week for 2 weeks after their first menstruation. The training will be repeated with a reminder session at the end of the 2nd menstruation.
OTHERBiomedical pain educationParticipants in the second research arm will be given biomedical pain education once a week for 2 weeks after their first menstruation. The training will be repeated with a reminder session at the end of the 2nd menstruation.

Timeline

Start date
2023-10-09
Primary completion
2024-11-08
Completion
2024-11-08
First posted
2023-09-18
Last updated
2025-01-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06040866. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.