Graded Motor Imagery As Adjunct To Comprehensive Physiotherapy In Chronic Rotator Cuff-Related Pain .
Graded motor imagery as an adjunct to comprehensive physiotherapy in chronic rotator cuff-related pain: a single blind randomized controlled trial.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord . 2025 Jul 3;26(1):588.Thirty-six patients with chronic rotator cuff–related shoulder pain (C-RCRSP) were randomized to receive comprehensive physiotherapy (CP; n=18) or CP plus graded motor imagery (CP+GMI; n=18). The primary outcomes were pain (NPRS) and function (SPADI). Secondary outcomes included pressure pain threshold (PPT), range of motion (ROM), left/right judgment task (LRJT) accuracy and response time, motor imagery ability (VMIQ-2), central sensitization symptoms (CSI), fear-avoidance and catastrophizing (FABQ, PCS), two-point discrimination, and global rating of change (GRC). Pain and PPT were repeatedly assessed at baseline, weeks 1–2, and week 6; other measures were assessed at baseline and 6 weeks. Overall, the results of the study revealed clinically important within-group improvements in both arms for pain, ROM, SPADI, and pain-related fear at 6 weeks, with earlier pain reductions and superior mechanosensory/neurocognitive gains in CP+GMI. In conclusion, adding GMI to physiotherapy appears to accelerate pain relief and enhance mechanical sensitivity and neurocognitive measures, though 6-week endpoint clinical differences vs physiotherapy alone were limited.
Vollständigen ACE-Bericht freischalten
Sie haben Zugang zu 4 weiteren KOSTENLOSEN Artikeln in diesem Monat.
Klicken Sie unten, um diese ACE Reports freizuschalten und anzusehen
Jetzt freischalten
Kritische Beurteilungen der neuesten, hochwirksamen randomisierten kontrollierten Studien und systematischen Übersichten in der Orthopädie
Zugang zu OrthoEvidence-Podcast-Inhalten, einschließlich Kooperationen mit dem Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Interviews mit international anerkannten Chirurgen und Diskussionsrunden zu orthopädischen Neuigkeiten und Themen
Abonnement von The Pulse, einem zweimal wöchentlich erscheinenden evidenzbasierten Newsletter, der Ihnen helfen soll, bessere klinische Entscheidungen zu treffen
Exklusiver Zugang zu Originalartikeln, einschließlich eigener systematischer Übersichten, sowie zu Artikeln über Methoden der Gesundheitsforschung und aktuelle orthopädische Themen