Effects of a Motor Imagery Exercise Protocol in Patients With Fibromyalgia
Fibromyalgia, Pain, Chronic, Image, Body
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Fibromyalgia focused on measuring Fibromyalgia, Pain, Imagery
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- experienced widespread pain for more than 3 months
- pain with 4 kg/cm2 pressure at 11 or more of the 18 tender points
- aged 18 to 60 years
- pharmacological therapeutic regimen must have been stable for at least three months before
Exclusion Criteria:
- pregnant women
- pacemaker wearers
- overlapping painful conditions
- presence of autoimmune or hematologic diseases
- psychiatric disorders in pharmacological and psychological treatment
- other causes of chronic pain
- other diseases such as epilepsy, tumors, major neurological problems and diabetes
Sites / Locations
- Umberto I Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Motor imagery rehabilitative group (MIG)
Control rehabilitative Group (CG)
All patients performed 10 treatment sessions, lasting 60 to 90 minutes, twice a week, in groups of three to four patients. The gold standard was to choose simple and safe exercises in order to encourage the patient to repeat the schedule at home. The exercises proposed in the MIG have been chosen respecting the following principles: slowness, painlessness, promoting attention, easy to imagine. The main purpose of motor imagery-based exercises was to bring the patient back to "feeling and self-perceiving" the execution of the movement. More than the "quantity" of repetition, the "quality" of the movement, free from pain, was important.
The CG received a conventional rehabilitation protocol, based on ten 1-hour sessions, held twice a week (over a 5-week period), previously investigated as efficient in FM by the authors and published. The exercises included low-to-moderate impact aerobic training, walking in a circle, alternating with periods of going up and down the stairs (3 steps for 10 minutes), for a total of 20 consecutive minutes, posture exercises for the back and proprioceptive exercises for the trunk, to improve axial stability. Each exercise was repeated 10 times (3 sets of 10), with a resting period of at least 3 minutes between sets. All sessions ended with stretching and diaphragmatic breathing exercises.