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The Effect of Psychologically Informed Education in Adolescents With Patellofemoral Pain

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome
Anterior Knee Pain Syndrome
Interventions
Other: Psychologically Informed Education Video
Other: Anatomy Education Video
Registration Number
NCT03897907
Lead Sponsor
Nationwide Children's Hospital
Brief Summary

This is a randomized prospective study assessing the impact of psychosocial factors on pain and physical performance among adolescents with anterior knee pain. A set of psychosocial surveys assessing activity-related fear, stress, anxiety and depression will be completed by the participant/parents. Participants will then complete clinical tests of physical performance, numeric pain rating scale, and a self-report questionnaire of functional ability. Participants will then be randomized into one of two psychosocial intervention groups (psychologically informed education group and a control group). After participants receive their assigned education intervention, the clinical tests of pain and self-reported functional ability will be readministered. Participants with anterior knee pain will then complete follow-up surveys of their psychosocial beliefs, pain and self-reported functional ability through REDcap at immediately post-intervention, 2 weeks, 6 weeks, and 3 months.

Detailed Description

This study will be a prospective randomized controlled trial design. Participants will complete the randomized intervention immediately after completing baseline testing. Post-intervention testing will also be completed immediately after the randomized intervention. A follow-up REDcap survey will be sent by email to assess function and pain at 2 weeks, 6 weeks and 3 months.

Intervention Psychologically Informed Education Group Psychologically Informed Education Medium There are many ways to provide patient education, but the investigators believe that adolescents will respond well to video education on a tablet. Adolescents are extremely comfortable with this technology, and the video will allow for standardized education among all participants.

Development of Psychologically Informed Education for adolescents with AKP Recommended adult pain science education will be modified using published recommendations for the adolescent population and tailored to anterior knee pain.(Robins, Perron, Heathcote, \& Simons, 2016) The education session will teach participants how the body processes nociception and experiences pain, and pain does not mean tissues are being damaged. Additionally the psychologically informed education video will use the framework called the "Common Sense Model of Self-Regulation" which advocates for education to address five cognitive dimensions: (1) identity (the effort to evaluate symptoms and label the illness); (2) cause (the subjectively formulated belief of what is causing the symptoms); (3) time-line (the patient's perception of how long the problem will last); (4) consequences (the patient's predictions of how the illness will affect them in different areas of their life); and (5) controllability (the patient's belief regarding their outcome and personal ability to change it).(Leventhal, Phillips, \& Burns, 2016) Control Group Participants in the control education group will watch a video on the iPad equal in length to the psychologically informed education video. The control video will discuss basic anatomy of the knee and provide no psychosocial education or positive reinforcement about their condition.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
68
Inclusion Criteria

Having patellofemoral pain as defined as: Pain around or behind the patella, which is aggravated by at least one activity that loads the patellofemoral joint during weight bearing on a flexed knee (e.g., squatting, stair ambulation, jogging/running, hopping/jumping)

Exclusion Criteria
  1. Prior history of patellar dislocation.
  2. Suspicion of other diagnosis of the knee by evaluating physical therapist or principal investigator.
  3. Other concomitant injury of the leg.
  4. Prior history of knee surgery.
  5. Red flags present for non-musculoskeletal involvement (bowel/bladder problems, saddle anesthesia, progressive neurological deficits, recent fever or infection, unexplained weight loss, unable to change symptoms with mechanical testing).
  6. Numbness and tingling in any lumbar dermatome.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Psychologically Informed EducationPsychologically Informed Education VideoThis arm will provide an education intervention which will attempt to address maladaptive psychological behaviors in adolescents with knee pain
Control EducationAnatomy Education VideoThis arm will provide education of basic knee anatomy and will not address maladaptive psychological behaviors.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Anterior Knee Pain ScaleTime Frame: Baseline, 2 weeks (12-16 days post-evaluation), 6 weeks (39-46 days post-evaluation), and 3 months

Assessment of change of the Anterior Knee Pain Scale (AKPS). The AKPS is a self-reported 13 item questionnaire with discrete categories related to various levels of current knee function. Categories within each item are weighted, and responses are summed to provide an overall score of 0-100, with 100 representing no disability. The Anterior Knee Pain Scale is found to be valid and reliable in patients from 12-50 years of age presenting with anterior knee pain with a test-retest reliability of .95 (Watson, 2005). A change of 10 points represent the minimal clinical difference (Crossley, 2004).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Numeric Pain Rating ScaleTime Frame: Baseline, 2 weeks (12-16 days post-evaluation), 6 weeks (39-46 days post-evaluation), and 3 months

The Numeric Pain rating scale asks the patient their highest pain in the last 24 hours. The Numeric Pain Rating Scale is a 0-10 scale subjectively assessing a patients perceived level of pain. With 0 on the scale = to no pain, and 10 = to the worst pain imaginable. The use of the Numerical Pain Rating Scale for assessing pain has been validated for use in patients with knee pain and has been found to have a minimal detectable change of 1 points.

Change in Fear-Avoidance BeliefsTime Frame: Baseline, immediately post-intervention, 2 weeks (12-16 days post-evaluation),

Fear avoidance beliefs as measured by the Fear Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire-Physical Activity Subscale

Change in KinesiophobiaTime Frame: Baseline, immediately post-intervention, 2 weeks (12-16 days post-evaluation),

Change in kinesiophobia beliefs as measure by the Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia-11 scale

Change in Pain CatastrophizingTime Frame: Baseline, immediately post-intervention, 2 weeks (12-16 days post-evaluation),

Change in pain catastrophizing as measured by the pain catastrophizing scale-child version

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Nationwide Children's Hospital Sports and Ortho Physical Therapy

🇺🇸

Columbus, Ohio, United States

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