The Effect of Perception of Improvement in Patients With Fibromyalgia

Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2024
Fibromyalgia (FM) is a chronic pain syndrome characterized by impaired perception, transmission, and processing of nociceptive stimuli and causing widespread pain. Pain in FM is the disease itself and is characterized by nociplastic pain that may occur independently of any peripheral nociceptor activity or be felt without disease or damage to the somatosensory system. It is thought that the pain processing process is disrupted due to the changing neurotransmitter release activity and this situation causes pain to be felt more in FM. Chronic pain is the result of perception alteration associated with nociceptive afferent information affecting the cortex; underlying this change are limbic emotional learning mechanisms. Numerous factors, including emotional state, attention, and past painful experiences, modulate nociceptive inputs with the activation of multiple brain regions, resulting in a personalized pain experience. The chronic pain management program should target the central nervous system rather than the peripheral tissues because pain originates in the sensitized nervous system. For this reason, it is important to include plasticity-oriented approaches, cortical disinhibition methods, and strategies for improving perception and behavior change, which aim to replace negative beliefs with positive beliefs, into clinical practice. Our project aims to investigate the effectiveness of the therapeutic intervention, which consists of patient education supported Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP), visual feedback and metaphor-assisted breathing therapy designed to provide a perception of improvement and presented in a virtual reality environment, on pain processing, pain intensity, pain-pressure threshold, psychosomatic reflections (biomechanical and viscoelastic properties of tissue, sleep quality, pain catastrophizing behavior, anxiety and depression), disease impact and quality of life in FM patients.
Epistemonikos ID: cf961a5a9ca64497cc1d63ae4aeff084d433ab67
First added on: Aug 01, 2024