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RecruitingNCT07277517

The Effect of Integrating Pain Neuroscience Education(PNE) With Conventional Physiotherapy on Pain and Functional Disability in Patients With Acute Low Back Pain

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
48 (estimated)
Sponsor
Iran University of Medical Sciences · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Acute low back pain is one of the most common health problems in the world. Most people experience it at least once in their lives, and although many cases improve within a few weeks, a significant number of patients continue to struggle with pain, fear of movement, stress, and reduced daily function. These psychological factors-such as catastrophizing ("my back is damaged"), fear of movement ("if I move, it gets worse"), and avoidance behaviors-can slow recovery and increase the risk of the pain becoming chronic. Pain Neuroscience Education (PNE) is a modern educational approach that teaches patients how pain actually works in the nervous system. Instead of focusing only on muscles and bones, PNE helps people understand how the brain interprets pain, why pain can persist even without serious injury, and how thoughts, emotions, and behaviors can influence the experience of pain. Research shows that PNE can reduce fear, improve movement, and help people participate better in rehabilitation-especially in chronic pain. However, there is very limited high-quality evidence about its effects in acute low back pain. The purpose of this study is to determine whether adding Pain Neuroscience Education to routine physiotherapy can improve recovery in people with acute low back pain. To do this, the investigators will conduct a single-blind randomized clinical trial with two groups of patients: Control group: Receives conventional physiotherapy, including soft-tissue mobilization and TENS, along with routine patient education about posture and back care. Intervention group: Receives the same physiotherapy plus two structured sessions of Pain Neuroscience Education, delivered individually using simple explanations, metaphors, and visual materials. Both groups will receive eight treatment sessions over four weeks. The investigators will measure several important outcomes before starting treatment and immediately after the 8th session, including: Pain intensity Functional disability Pain catastrophizing Fear-avoidance beliefs Fear of movement (kinesiophobia) The investigators' hypothesis is that patients who receive PNE in addition to routine physiotherapy will show greater reductions in pain, disability, fear, and catastrophizing compared to those receiving physiotherapy alone. If proven effective, this approach could provide a simple, low-cost, and safe addition to physiotherapy that not only reduces pain but also prevents acute low back pain from turning into a chronic condition. This could help improve patients' quality of life and reduce the economic and healthcare burden caused by low back pain.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERroutine physiotherapy + traditional patient educationConventional Physiotherapy (Control Group) Participants in the control group will receive a baseline physiotherapy protocol, administered twice weekly for four weeks (8 sessions total). Each session includes: Soft Tissue Mobilization (40 minutes): Four specific myofascial release techniques targeting the low back and pelvic muscles (e.g., transverse sliding of lumbar muscles, thoracolumbar fascia release, quadratus lumborum release, iliopsoas release). Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) (30 minutes): Applied crosswise over the low back with parameters set at 100 Hz frequency and 300 µs pulse width, adjusted to a strong but comfortable sensory level. Additionally, this group receives two individual 50-minute sessions of standard physical hygiene and routine back care education to control for the time and attention given to the experimental group's Pain Neuroscience Education.
BEHAVIORALpain neuroscience educationThe experimental group receives the same conventional physiotherapy as the control group, with the addition of PNE. This consists of two individual, face-to-face educational sessions (40-50 minutes each), delivered before the first and after the last physiotherapy session. The curriculum is based on established resources ("Explain Pain" and "Pain Neuroscience Education: Teaching People About Pain") and uses metaphors, examples, and slides to reconceptualize pain by explaining neurobiology, central sensitization, and the distinction between pain and tissue injury. Understanding is assessed using the revised Neurophysiology of Pain Questionnaire (rNPQ), and participants receive a booklet for reinforced learning at home.

Timeline

Start date
2025-10-05
Primary completion
2026-04-01
Completion
2026-08-01
First posted
2025-12-11
Last updated
2026-04-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Iran

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07277517. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.