Surgeons Can Avoid Lasting Pain Through Exercise Literacy
- Conditions
- Neck PainShoulder Pain
- Interventions
- Other: Exercise
- Registration Number
- NCT05175443
- Lead Sponsor
- Timothy Uhl
- Brief Summary
The physical demands of surgery are in many ways similar to those of high-performance athletes. No professional athlete would consider performing without careful attention to strengthening and physical preparedness, yet surgeons routinely place rigorous demands on their bodies without any training plan specific to their work demands. A series of exercises were developed to help stretch and strengthen the key core muscles to support surgeons during operating to prevent neck pain. This study hypothesizes that Neck pain discomfort will decrease following an 8-week intervention program compared to baseline reported scores.
- Detailed Description
Participant will be asked to fill out a series 5 questionnaires at beginning of the study, end of the 8-week intervention and 1 month later to determine how the exercise program affected their general health, neck pain, and function.
1. Demographic information about their age, height, weight, sex, surgical experience, surgical frequency, level of pain, and exercise frequency and types. (21 items)
2. A questionnaire about neck pain (10 items)
3. A questionnaire about how pain interferes with their life (8 items)
4. A questionnaire about general health (10 items)
5. A questionnaire about how much the participant typically exercise. (4 items) All these questionnaires can be completed on a computer or tablet and the data will be stored on a secure site (RedCap). This should be completed in approximately 20 minutes at each assessment.
Next participants will be instructed how to perform a series of 4 exercises described in the intervention
Every week the participant will be sent a 3-item questionnaire to report their level of pain, surgical burden, and exercise compliance for the week. There are only 3 multiple choice questions which should take approximately 1 minute to complete per week.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 41
- must be an actively operating surgeon either faculty, fellow, or resident.
- Must report at least 4 out of 10 with pain at worst over the previous week at intake that is attributed to operating.
- Participants will be excluded if they have prior neck or upper back surgery within the last year.
- If the participant has any other medical condition that would prevent the participant from performing shoulder and neck strengthening and stretching exercises.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Exercise Intervention Exercise 1. Wall Angels:Stretching tight anterior shoulder musculature Participants will assume this position and slide their arms up and down the wall for 2 minutes. 2. Cervical Spine Mobility: will be accomplished by having the participant stabilize their shoulders and side bend their head in various positions to stretch each side of their next for 2 minutes with 10-15 second holds in each position. 3. Posterior shoulder strengthening: will be performed with shoulder externally rotating and squeezing the scapular with 5 second holds for 2 minutes. 4. Thoracic Spinal mobility: to improve thoracic extension participants will use a strap or tennis ball and perform thoracic extension with 10 second holds for 2 minutes.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in Neck Disability Index Baseline, at end of 8 weeks of intervention The Neck Disability Index is 10 items, with each item consisting of likert type scale ranging from 0-4 with a lower score indicating less disability. The 10 items are summed for a total of potential 50 points which is then normalized to 100% scale by multiplying by 2.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Worse Neck Pain Baseline, at end of 8 weeks of intervention Numeric pain rating scale of worse pain for the week in the neck. Scale ranges from 0=no pain to 10=worst pain imaginable
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University of Kentucky
🇺🇸Lexington, Kentucky, United States