51. Effectiveness of perioperative pain science education on pain, psychological factors and physical functioning: A systematic review.
- Author
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Van der Gucht E, Dams L, Haenen V, Godderis L, Morlion B, Bernar K, Evenepoel M, De Vrieze T, Vandendriessche T, Asnong A, Geraerts I, Devoogdt N, De Groef A, and Meeus M
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Preoperative Care, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee, Pain, Postoperative
- Abstract
Objective: To synthesize the evidence on the effectiveness of pain science education on pain, psychological factors and physical functioning in adults who underwent surgery., Data Sources: A systematic literature search of English articles using PubMed/Medline, Embase, Web of Science Core Collection, and Cochrane Library., Review Methods: The search strategy was constructed as follows: (((pain) AND (education)) OR (pain education)) AND (surgery). Only controlled quantitative studies in adults reporting outcome(s) on pain, psychological factors and/or physical functioning were included. Risk of bias was assessed using the Cochrane risk of bias tools. P -values and corresponding effect sizes for interaction-effect (time × group) portrayed the difference in change over time between groups were of interest. The last search was conducted on February 28, 2021., Results: Nine papers ( n = 1078) were deemed eligible for this review. Two randomized controlled trials showed significant interaction effects. Breast cancer patients who had received one preoperative pain science education session showed a significant increase in postoperative pain compared to controls ( P -value = 0.0394). Furthermore, p sychological factors (pain catastrophizing and kinesiophobia) decreased in participants who had received pain science education before total knee arthroplasty, while this was not the case in the control group ( P -value < 0.001, ƞ2p:0.11)., Conclusions: Overall, pain science education did not result in any significant postoperative effects on pain, psychological factors and/or physical functioning compared to controls. There is currently no strong evidence for the implementation of pain science education in the perioperative period. Registration number: PROSPERO: ID 161267, registration number CRD42020161267.
- Published
- 2021
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