A fundamental clinical problem in individuals with chronic low back pain is the significant alteration in movement patterns that restrict lumbar spine motion. This is particularly true for individuals with fear of re-injury with movement (i.e., kinesiophobia). The primary aims of the current study are to use a whole body video game environment to 1) determine the effects of game play on lumbar spine flexion and expectations of pain and harm and 2) determine the effects of altered movement gain on lumbar spine flexion.
Using a 2 groups (Game, Control) between subjects design, the investigators will assess the influence of participation in a computer game of virtual dodge ball that requires whole-body reaching movements to manipulate an on-screen avatar. Further, the investigators will gradually reduce the gain of lumbar spine motion of the participant's on-screen avatar across the three game sessions such that participants will need to produce progressively larger excursions of the lumbar spine to manipulate their avatar's spinal motion. Specifically, in game session 1, the spine motion of the avatar is equal to that of the participant (gain=1); in session 2 spine motion of the avatar is 5% less than the participant (gain=0.95); in session 3 spine motion of the avatar is 10% less than the participant (gain=0.90). The investigators will recruit participants with chronic low back pain and kinesiophobia. Participants in the GAME condition will complete laboratory sessions on five consecutive days. Session 1 (baseline) and Session 5 (post-test) will be used to assess lumbar spine motion and expectations of pain and harm during standardized reaching tasks. In sessions 2 through 4 they will play the virtual dodge ball game. Participants in the CONTROL condition will complete baseline and post-test standardized reaching tasks, but will not play the game in the intervening three days.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
53
We will assess the influence of participation in a computer game of virtual dodge ball that requires whole-body reaching movements to manipulate an on-screen avatar. We will gradually reduce the gain of lumbar spine motion of the participant's on-screen avatar across the three game sessions such that participants will need to produce progressively larger excursions of the lumbar spine to manipulate their avatar's spinal motion. Specifically, in game session 1, the spine motion of the avatar is equal to that of the participant (gain=1); in session 2 spine motion of the avatar is 5% less than the participant (gain=0.95); in session 3 spine motion of the avatar is 10% less than the participant (gain=0.90).
Ohio University
Athens, Ohio, United States
Lumbar spine flexion changes
This assessment tracks the magnitude of spine motion used to complete standardized reaching tasks in which participants reach to 3 targets (High, Middle, Low) located in the mid-sagittal plane. Participants will perform five reaching trials to each the target location and then return to an upright posture, with rest provided between each trial. Lumbar spine flexion will be defined as the change in joint angle (i.e., the difference between the joint angles at the beginning of the trial before the go signal and those extracted 100 ms after target contact). The average of the five reaches to each target location will serve as the dependent variable.
Time frame: baseline (day 1) to post-test (day 5)
Expectation of pain changes
For each target height, prior to the first reaching trial participants will be asked to rate the level of "expected pain" using a visual analog scale. The scale will consist of a 10-cm horizontal line with no numbers, marks, or descriptive vocabulary along its length. The scale will be anchored with the descriptors "No pain" and "Worst pain imaginable", respectively, at each end of the line. The pain expectancy ratings for each target location will serve as the dependent variable.
Time frame: baseline (day 1) to post-test (day 5)
Expectation of harm changes
For each target height, prior to the first reaching trial participants will be asked to rate the level of "expected harm" using a visual analog scale. The scale will consist of a 10-cm horizontal line with no numbers, marks, or descriptive vocabulary along its length. The scale will be anchored with "Not at all concerned" and "Extremely concerned" regarding potential harm to the back during task performance. The harm expectancy ratings for each target location will serve as the dependent variable.
Time frame: baseline (day 1) to post-test (day 5)
Lumbar spine flexion change as a function of altered movement gain
Change in lumbar flexion measured during game play will be measured across the three gaming sessions.
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Time frame: session day 2, 3 and 4