PSYCH OpenIR  > 中国科学院心理健康重点实验室
Cerebral mechanism of Tuina analgesia in management of knee osteoarthritis using multimodal MRI: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
Guo,Guangxin1,2,3,4; Kong,Yazhuo5; Zhu,Qingguang1,3; Wu,Zhiwei1,3; Zhang,Shuaipan1,3; Sun,Wuquan1; Cheng,Yanbin1,3; Fang,Min1,3,4
第一作者Guangxin Guo
通讯作者邮箱cyb22011249@163.com (yanbin cheng) ; fangmin19650510@163.com (min fang)
心理所单位排序5
摘要

AbstractBackgroundThe chronic pain of patients with knee osteoarthritis (KOA) seriously affects their quality of life and leads to heavy social and economic burden. As a nondrug therapy in Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), Tuina is generally recognised as safe and effective for reducing the chronic pain of KOA. However, the underlying central mechanisms of Tuina for improving the pain of KOA are not fully understood.Methods/designThis study will be a randomised controlled trial with a parallel-group design. A total of 60 eligible participants will be assigned to the Tuina group or healthcare education group (Education group) at 1:1 ratio using stratified randomisation with gender and age as factors. The interventions of both groups will last for 30 min per session and be conducted twice each week for 12 weeks. This study will primarily focus on pain evaluation assessed by detecting the changes in brain grey matter (GM) structure, white matter (WM) structure, and the cerebral functional connectivity (FC) elicited by Tuina treatment, e.g., thalamus, hippocampus, anterior cingulate gyrus, S1, insula, and periaqueductal grey subregions (PAG). The two groups of patients will be evaluated by clinical assessments and multimodal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to observe the alterations in the GM, WM, and FC of participants at the baseline and the end of 6 and 12 weeks’ treatment and still be evaluated by clinical assessments but not MRI for 48 weeks of follow-up. The visual analogue scale of current pain is the primary outcome. The Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index, 36-Item Short Form Health Survey, Hamilton Depression Scale, and Hamilton Anxiety Scale will be used to evaluate the pain intensity, pain feeling, pain emotion, clinical symptoms, and quality of life, respectively. MRI assessments, clinical data evaluators, data managers, and statisticians will be blinded to the group allocation in the outcome evaluation procedure and data analysis to reduce the risk of bias. The repeated measures analysis of variance (2 groups × 6 time points ANOVA) will be used to analyse numerical variables of the clinical and neuroimaging data obtained in the study. P<0.05 will be the statistical significance level.DiscussionThe results of this randomised controlled trial with clinical assessments and multimodal MRI will help reveal the influence of Tuina treatment on the potential morphological changes in cortical and subcortical brain structures, the white matter integrity, and the functional activities and connectivity of brain regions of patients with KOA, which may provide scientific evidence for the clinical application of Tuina in the management of KOA.Trial registrationChinese Clinical Trial Registry ChiCTR2000037966. Registered on Sep. 8, 2020.DisseminationThe results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and disseminated through the study’s website, and conferences.

关键词Knee osteoarthritis Chronic pain Tuina (Chinese massage) Analgesia mechanism Multimodal MRI
2022-08-19
语种英语
DOI10.1186/s13063-022-06633-x
发表期刊Trials
卷号23期号:1页码:13
期刊论文类型实证研究
收录类别SCI
资助项目National Natural Science Foundation of China[81973973] ; National Natural Science Foundation of China[82105042] ; Postdoctoral Science Foundation of China[2021M692156] ; Shanghai Post-doctoral Excellence Program[2020371] ; Three-year Development Plan Project for TCM[ZY(2018-2020)CCCX-2004-02]
出版者BioMed Central
WOS关键词CENTRAL SENSITIZATION ; PAIN SENSITIZATION ; FUNCTIONAL MRI ; HEALTH ; HIP ; EXERCISE ; THERAPY ; RELIABILITY ; DISEASE ; BURDEN
WOS研究方向Research & Experimental Medicine
WOS类目Medicine, Research & Experimental
WOS记录号BMC:10.1186/s13063-022-06633-x
WOS分区Q4
资助机构National Natural Science Foundation of China ; Postdoctoral Science Foundation of China ; Shanghai Post-doctoral Excellence Program ; Three-year Development Plan Project for TCM
引用统计
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符https://ir.psych.ac.cn/handle/311026/43061
专题中国科学院心理健康重点实验室
通讯作者Cheng,Yanbin; Fang,Min
作者单位1.Yueyang Hospital of Integrated Traditional Chinese and Western Medicine, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; Tuina Department
2.Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; Shanghai Municipal Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine
3.Institute of Tuina, Shanghai Institute of Traditional Chinese Medicine
4.Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine; School of Acupuncture-Moxibustion and Tuina
5.Chinese Academy of Sciences; CAS Key Laboratory of Mental Health, Institute of Psychology
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Guo,Guangxin,Kong,Yazhuo,Zhu,Qingguang,et al. Cerebral mechanism of Tuina analgesia in management of knee osteoarthritis using multimodal MRI: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial[J]. Trials,2022,23(1):13.
APA Guo,Guangxin.,Kong,Yazhuo.,Zhu,Qingguang.,Wu,Zhiwei.,Zhang,Shuaipan.,...&Fang,Min.(2022).Cerebral mechanism of Tuina analgesia in management of knee osteoarthritis using multimodal MRI: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial.Trials,23(1),13.
MLA Guo,Guangxin,et al."Cerebral mechanism of Tuina analgesia in management of knee osteoarthritis using multimodal MRI: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial".Trials 23.1(2022):13.
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