Model System:

Burn

Reference Type:

JA

Accession No.:

Journal:


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Year, Volume, Issue, Page(s):

, 88, 12 Suppl 2, S43-S49

Publication Website:

Abstract:

OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy and side effects of immersive virtual reality (VR) distraction analgesia, as well as patient factors associated with VR analgesic efficacy in burn patients who require passive range-of-motion (ROM) physical therapy (PT). DESIGN: Prospective, randomized, controlled, within-subject trials. SETTING: Regional level I burn center in a university-affiliated urban hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Patients (age range, 6-65y) who required passive ROM PT in sessions lasting 3 to 15 minutes after cutaneous burn injury. INTERVENTIONS: Standard analgesic (opioid and/or benzodiazepine) care and standard analgesic care plus immersive VR distraction. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Self-reported subjective pain ratings (0 to 100 graphic rating scale). RESULTS: A total of 146 treatment comparisons were made in 88 subjects, 75% of whom were children ages 6 to 18 years. Compared with standard analgesic treatment alone, the addition of VR distraction resulted in significant reductions in subjective pain ratings for worst pain intensity (20% reduction), pain unpleasantness (26% reduction), and time spent thinking about pain (37% reduction). Subjects' age, sex, ethnicity, size of initial burn injury, or duration of therapy session did not affect the analgesic effects of VR distraction. Nausea with the standard care plus VR distraction condition was infrequent (15%) and mild, with 85% of the subjects reporting no nausea. Children provided higher subjective reports of "presence" in the virtual environment and "realness" of the virtual environment than did adults, but age did not affect the analgesic effects of VR distraction. CONCLUSIONS: When added to standard analgesic therapy, VR distraction provides a clinically meaningful degree of pain relief to burn patients undergoing passive ROM PT. Multiple patient factors do not appear to affect the analgesic effect. Immersive VR distraction is a safe and effective nonpharmacologic technique with which to provide adjunctive analgesia to facilitate patient participation in rehabilitation activities.

Author(s):


Sharar, S.R., Carrougher, G.J., Nakamura, D., Hoffman, H.G., Blough, D.K., Patterson, D.R.

Participating Centers: