Feasibility of using remotely delivered Spring Forest Qigong to reduce neuropathic pain in adults with spinal cord injury: A pilot study
Data files
Sep 11, 2023 version files 44.58 KB
Abstract
Introduction: Approximately 69% of 299,000 Americans with spinal cord injury (SCI) suffer debilitating chronic neuropathic pain, which is intractable to treatment. The aim of this study is to determine feasibility, as the primary objective, and estimates of efficacy of a remotely delivered Qigong intervention in adults with SCI-related neuropathic pain, as the secondary objective.
Methods: We recruited adults with SCI-related neuropathic pain, with SCI ≥3 months, with complete or incomplete SCI, and highest neuropathic pain level of >3 on the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS), using nationwide volunteer sampling. Using a non-randomized controlled trial design, participants practiced Spring Forest Qigong’s “Five Element Qigong Healing Movements” (online video) by combining movement to the best of their ability with kinesthetic imagery, at least 3x/week for 12 weeks. Adherence was automatically tracked through the Spring Forest Qigong website. Outcomes of neuropathic pain intensity (NPRS) were assessed weekly, and SCI-related symptoms were assessed at baseline, 6, and 12 weeks of Qigong practice and at 6-week and 1-year follow-ups.
Results: We recruited 23 adults with chronic SCI (7/2021–2/2023). In total, 18 participants started the study and completed all study components, including the 6-week follow-up. Twelve participants completed the 1-year follow-up assessment. Feasibility was demonstrated through participants’ willingness to participate, adherence, and acceptability of the study. Mean age of the 18 participants was 60 ± 12 years, and they were 15 ± 11 years post-SCI with the highest baseline neuropathic pain of 7.94 ± 2.33, which was reduced to 4.17 ± 3.07 after 12 weeks of Qigong practice (Cohen’s d = 1.75). This pain relief remained at 6-week and 1-year follow-ups. Participants reported reduced spasm frequency (change score 1.17 ± 1.20, d = 0.98) and severity (0.72 ± 1.02, d = 0.71), reduced interference of neuropathic pain on mood (3.44 ± 2.53, d = 1.36), sleep (3.39 ± 2.40, d = 1.41), daily activities (3.17 ± 2.77, d = 1.14), greater ability to perform functional activities (6.68 ± 3.07, d = 2.18), and improved mood (2.33 ± 3.31, d = 0.70) after Qigong.
Discussion: Remote Spring Forest Qigong’s “Five Element Qigong Healing Movements” practice is feasible in adults with SCI-related neuropathic pain, with promising prolonged results of neuropathic pain relief and improvement in SCI-related symptoms after Qigong practice.
Clinical trial registration: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04917107, identifier NCT04917107
README
This readme.txt file was generated on <20230502> by
Recommended citation for the data: will be completed upon publication of the article
GENERAL INFORMATION
- Title of Dataset: Data used for a non-randomized controlled trial of remote Qigong in adults with spinal cord injury-related neuropathic pain.
- Author Information
Principal Investigator Contact Information
Name: Ann Van de Winckel
Institution: Division of Physical Therapy, Division of Rehabilitation Science, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Medical School, University of Minnesota
Address: 420 Delaware ST SE (MMC388), Minneapolis, MN 55455
Email: avandewi@umnn.edu
ORCID: 0000-0001-8400-3177
Associate or Co-investigator Contact Information
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Associate or Co-investigator Contact Information
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- Date published or finalized for release: The information will soon be submitted to the journal JAMA Network Open
- Date of data collection (single date, range, approximate date) 20210701-20230202
- Geographic location of data collection (where was data collected?): Minnesota
- Information about funding sources that supported the collection of the data: National Institutes of Health’s National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences grant UL1TR002494; Internal funding by the Division of Physical Therapy, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Medical School, University of Minnesota
- Overview of the data (abstract): This xls file contains brief clinical/behavioral data of adults with spinal cord injury-related neuropathic pain.
SHARING/ACCESS INFORMATION
- Licenses/restrictions placed on the data: No release until publication of the manuscript
- Links to publications that cite or use the data: JAMA Network Open (paper will be submitted soon)
- Was data derived from another source? If yes, list source(s):
- Terms of Use: Data Repository for the U of Minnesota (DRYAD) By using these files, users agree to the Terms of Use.
DATA & FILE OVERVIEW
- File List A. Filename: Remote Qigong for Dryad_5.2.2023_no identifiers Short description: xls file contains brief clinical/behavioral data of adults with spinal cord injury-related neuropathic pain <br> B. Filename:Short description: <br> C. Filename:Short description:
- Relationship between files:
METHODOLOGICAL INFORMATION
- Description of methods used for collection/generation of data: REDCap (community-dwelling adults with SCI)
- Methods for processing the data: xls and regular statistical software packages
- Instrument- or software-specific information needed to interpret the data: Regular statistical software packages
- Standards and calibration information, if appropriate: NA
- Environmental/experimental conditions: NA
- Describe any quality-assurance procedures performed on the data: REDCap has a system in place that all cells need to be completed.
- People involved with sample collection, processing, analysis and/or submission: Van de Winckel Ann (principal investigator); Sydney Carpentier and Wei Deng (graduate students)
DATA-SPECIFIC INFORMATION FOR: [FILENAME]
- Number of variables:23
- Number of cases/rows: 18
- Missing data codes: colored spaces (gray) Code/symbol Definition Code/symbol Definition
- Variable List: Ssee legend book in the xls file
All variables are scores of assessments. There is no coding used to categorize variables.
Methods
Responses to questionnaires were collected on the University of Minnesota REDCap platform
Data were exported into an xls file