Manual therapy
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Muscle therapy, a form of manual therapy, was applied to control pain persisting for more than 1 week following posterolateral thoracotomy, and its efficacy for the alleviation of pain was investigated. Eight patients who underwent posterolateral thoracotomy and lung resection for cancer (n=7) or emphysema (n=1) received manual therapy to incised muscles and the muscles inserting into the ribs in the affected area for an average of 17 days postoperatively. Pressure-friction and stretching techniques were used. ⋯ Pain severity was measured using a visual analog scale (VAS) (0-10). Before the first treatment, the VAS was set at 10, and changes of the score were observed before and after the treatment as well as over time. After three sessions, all patients showed a decrease in pain from 10 to an average of 1.9 (range 1.3-2.6).
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The transition from acute to chronic low back pain (LBP) is influenced by many interacting factors. Pain-related fear, as measured by the Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK) and the Fear-Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire (FABQ), is one of these factors. The objectives of this study were to investigate, in a population with acute LBP, the reliability of TSK and FABQ through evaluation of the internal consistency, the test-retest reliability, and the concurrent validity between TSK and FABQ. ⋯ Concurrent validity is moderate, ranging from r(s) =0.33 to 0.59 (P<0.01). It may be concluded that in a population with acute LBP, both the TSK and the FABQ are reliable measures of pain-related fear. In the clinical setting they may provide the practitioner a means of identifying pain-related fear in a patient with acute LBP.