Nuket Curran, PT, DPT, prepares a flexible, wearable wrap that provides ice and heat therapy. The ability to wear ice can increase a patient’s level of participation in therapy. Likewise, the ability to wear thermal therapy to or from an appointment can save time for one-on-one treatment.

Nuket Curran, PT, DPT, prepares a flexible, wearable wrap that provides ice and heat therapy. The ability to wear ice can increase a patient’s level of participation in therapy. Likewise, the ability to wear thermal therapy to or from an appointment can save time for one-on-one treatment.

by Nuket Curran, PT, DPT Back pain is one diagnosis that leads many patients to seek physical therapy in a search of a “magic bullet” that will get rid of pain once and for all. Back pain prevalence is as high as 20.3% among all Americans, making it one of the leaders in disability in the nation.1 Physical therapy seeks to reduce pain and return the patient to optimal function. To do so, evidence-based practices must be used to reach appropriate rehab diagnoses and treatments. Adjunctive interventions including electrical modalities or passive applications are a common part of pain management in physical therapy treatment. But the question is, what is the most appropriate choice? Pain management has evolved rapidly. Evidence for many long-established interventions within physical therapy have not kept up with these changes. This puts the onus on the clinician to remain up to date in current pain management practices. Using the “SIN” of pain (severity, intensity and nature), the clinician can still determine what the pain might originate from. Some basic terms used to describe pain appear below in Table 1. Table1Pain The other aspect of pain management is determining if the injury and cause is acute, subacute and chronic, or sometimes a mixture. The determination of interventions, whether manual, exercise, or modality, is dependent on what the origin of pain is and the length of time since injury. The intervention options are the challenge, but the evidence, or lack thereof, should dictate the choice.

Choosing an Intervention

When choosing the appropriate intervention, the clinician considers many things in the process of formulating a rehab diagnosis of the patient using the International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health (ICF) model, for example. All of the data collected from the patient comes into play—history, social, economic, personal, and environmental—to help determine a holistic approach to the patient’s care. Some of the standard choices include the following modalities that appear in Table 2. Table2Pain Clinical experiences guide the way that clinicians select what to do with patients, sometimes more strongly than the evidence. The problem is that studying intervention effects on patients is challenging due to subjectivity and study design. Caution is needed when determining the best intervention and the need to make sure that a firm hypothesis is established for management of the diagnosis. When evidence is available to support these decisions, this should be included in the rationale for intervention choice. Using a scientific method to determine what works is invaluable versus the “kitchen sink” method. People, in general, are creatures of habit and rely on what has worked in the past versus seeking the most evidence-based and logical approach. TENS has many years of use behind it due to its effectiveness and convenience. It offers an electrical current in various wave forms and intensities to stimulate either pain or motor fibers.12 For the purposes of pain management, there is some evidence to indicate that high-frequency TENS is more effective.13 The focal pain relief for either acute or chronic pain can be a useful tool for pain management. Patients’ acceptance is high because it allows them to treat their pain outside of their office visit. Analgesic creams and sprays have had their place in physical therapy sports medicine for many years. The natural concept exists that when you rub a sore area, you experience some pain reduction. Studies indicate that there is some credence to applying these topical applications, but it is limited at best. Their “reach” is limited to superficial with little influence over decreasing pain below the epidermis.14,16 There are studies that have shown replication of the effects of TENS, by modulating the Pain Gate, thus reducing the sensation of pain.15,18 Therapeutic laser has been available since the 1980s. However, reimbursement for it remains elusive in some cases.23,24 Low Level Laser Therapy (LLLT) or Cold Laser Therapy and High Intensity Laser Therapy (HILT) or Hot Laser Therapy are two modalities largely available in chiropractic and physical therapy offices. Cold laser is associated with more superficial tissue management—for example, tendinopathies—while Hot laser is intended for treatment of deeper structures—for example, arthritic joints. The effects of therapeutic lasers range from thermal effects, kinetic, cell permeability, photochemical, and cellular energy producing, to name a few.17-21 These effects have been linked with pain reduction, inflammation reduction, and inhibition at the neuromuscular junction.17-22 The variability between studies includes the wavelength, dosage time, and type (pulsed or continuous).

Psychological Factors

“Psychologically informed” physical therapy encompasses identification of patients with the likelihood of failure in therapy treatment due to psychological factors. The STarT Back tool was created13 to help clinicians identify “modifiable risk factors (biomedical, psychological, and social) for back pain disability.”13 Once patients are identified as high risk for long-term disability as a result of their back pain, clinicians are guided to seek either other healthcare providers with cognitive behavioral approaches or apply simple techniques with their patients. The tool itself is a nine-item questionnaire which asks the patient specific questions about pain and their perception of it. Where the Oswestry Disability Index measures function in relation to pain, the STarT Back tool asks pain attitude questions related to fear and anxiety from pain. It gives the clinician a “barometer” of patient pain perception as it relates to what they feel about their pain versus their actual pain.

Wearable Ice and Heat

When it comes to reimbursement and cost, these two items are nearly as prominent as pain management. The amount of reimbursement continues to decrease, while the cost to manage a business does not. Small physical therapy practices must balance these aspects and care of the patient. This includes considering the cost and value to the patient. To apply Aristotle’s thinking to healthcare, the best intervention chosen should be the right thing at the right time for the right reason. This is where adjunctive therapy devices can be useful when there is evidence to support them. For example, an adjustable, flexible wrap that provides wearable ice and heat therapy is available to the physical therapy market that incorporates thermal therapy with clothing to allow patient independence while being treated for back pain. A patient wearing this type of wrap can wear their thermal therapy to or from their treatment appointment, thus saving time for one-on-one physical therapy treatment. For patients affected by low to mid back pain who need ice or heat as part of their treatment, this type of wrap can be an effective solution for thermal therapy, time management, adjustable compression, and targeted vasoconstriction or vasodilation.

Good Care Lasts Forever

With the changes placed on physical therapists to provide efficient, cost-effective, evidence-based, high quality, and empathetic care, interventions that meet these needs are paramount. Clinicians must change “habits” and instead seek evidence-based practice and holistic approaches to determine a plan of care that meets the needs of the patient-consumer of healthcare. Old habits die hard, but good business practices and medical care lasts forever. RM Nuket Curran, PT, DPT, has been a physical therapist for 20 years and established her company, Fightin’ Fit Physical Therapy LLC, in 2016. She is an adjunct lecturer at Duquesne University and Utica College, and guest lectures for Chatham University. For more information, contact [email protected].

References

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