Treatment of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Chronic Pain After Traumatic Orthopedic Injury
Chronic Pain, Post-traumatic Stress Disorder
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Chronic Pain focused on measuring Chronic pain, PTSD
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- age 18 years or older
- hospital admission for any traumatic orthopedic injury defined as any musculo-skeletal injury requiring convalescence and/or surgery that is deployment related.
- Fluency in English
- Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) = 15 at time of hospital discharge
- willingness and ability to meet study follow-up requirements
- PTSD CheckList - Military (PCL-M) > 30
- duration of any amount of pain >12 weeks based on self-report and date of injury, and PTSD symptoms of > to 4 weeks.
- Pain Disability Questionnaire (PDQ) > 30
- no current need for surgical intervention for pain
- be stable on any psychotropic medications they may be taking. (Participants will be required to meet psychotropic medication stabilization criteria for the periods preceding and overlapping with the diagnostic assessment and treatment. This criterion is established in order to minimize the likelihood that significant outcome effects may be attributed to changes in psychotropic medications rather than to the treatment protocol.)
- medically cleared for study participation by Orthopedic provider or collaborating study physician
- Active Duty Military, Reserve, or Activated Reservist
Exclusion Criteria:
- head injury greater than mild TBI as assessed by an inability to consent to the study and complete the baseline psychological testing
- current pregnancy will exclude participation in Functional Capacity Evaluation (FCE) assessment, but not study participation. Pregnancy will be assessed by self-report
- current diagnosis of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or other psychotic disorder as identified by clinical interview
- primary diagnosis of burn injury, though burn patients will be eligible if burn is a secondary diagnosis and not the primary reason for pain
- participant is currently taking a benzodiazepine medication for PTSD symptoms
- unstable suicidal ideation
- currently receiving prolonged exposure treatment for PTSD
Sites / Locations
- The University of Texas at Arlington
- Brooke Army Medical Center
- Wilford Hall Medical Center
- University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Arm 4
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
No Intervention
Pain Treatment Only
PTSD Treatment Only
Combined Pain and PTSD Treatment
Treatment as Usual
Pain treatment will involve five-sessions over 5 weeks of individual treatment protocol based on the existing chronic pain management program through the Clinical Health Psychology Service at Wilford Hall Medical Center. This treatment will involve covering the difference between chronic and acute pain, the role of cognitive, behavioral, and emotional variables in pain progression, and ways to manage these variables to prevent the development of chronic pain.
The PTSD treatment used in this study is an adaptation of a brief Prolonged Exposure treatment protocol for PTSD as illustrated in a 2005 paper published by Cigrang, Peterson, and Schobitz in which a 4-session prolonged exposure treatment was used to address PTSD symptoms in three injured soldiers recently exposed to trauma. The authors found a 50+% decrease in PTSD symptoms after these four sessions. The present study will rely upon a similar brief PTSD intervention for treating chronic PTSD among trauma-exposed injured active duty service members. The PTSD intervention will be expanded into five sessions over 5 weeks to include an initial session for assessment and education on the co-morbidity of pain and PTSD. All PTSD treatment will be provided under the direct care or supervision of a Master Trained therapist in Prolonged Exposure.
This treatment arm will involve 5 sessions each of the Pain-Only and PTSD-Only treatments described above.
The treatment as usual group will complete the assessments given in each of the other study arms, but will not participate in treatment through the study. Instead, participants randomized to this group will be encouraged to seek treatment for pain and/or PTSD through existing channels. Referrals for treatment will be made for those with clinically significant symptoms for pain and/or PTSD at intake.