Effects of a Mind-Body Program for Chronic Pain in Older versus Younger Adults

Improving physical function is key to decreasing the burden of chronic pain across the lifespan. Although mind-body interventions show promise in increasing physical function in chronic pain, very little is known about whether older and younger adults derive similar benefit. Indeed, older adults exp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pain research 2023-11, Vol.16, p.3917-3924
Hauptverfasser: LaRowe, Lisa R, Bakhshaie, Jafar, Vranceanu, Ana-Maria, Greenberg, Jonathan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Improving physical function is key to decreasing the burden of chronic pain across the lifespan. Although mind-body interventions show promise in increasing physical function in chronic pain, very little is known about whether older and younger adults derive similar benefit. Indeed, older adults experience higher rates of chronic pain and greater impacts of pain on physical function compared to younger adults. Therefore, additional work is needed to determine the extent of benefit older versus younger adults receive from a mind-body intervention. Here, we examined age differences in the effects of two mind-body and walking programs on pain and multimodal physical function. Participants were 82 individuals with heterogenous chronic musculoskeletal pain (66% female, 57% aged ≥50 years) who participated in a feasibility randomized controlled trial of two mind-body interventions. They completed self-reported (WHODAS 2.0), performance-based (6-minute walk test), and objective (accelerometer-measured step count) measures of physical function, as well as self-report measures of pain intensity, before and after the intervention. Results indicated that adults aged ≥50 (vs adults aged
ISSN:1178-7090
1178-7090
DOI:10.2147/JPR.S435639