Is Conditioned Pain Modulation Predictive of Clinical Improvement in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain?
Eligible age
18–64 yrs
Accepts
All genders
Locations
1 state
Healthy volunteers
No
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About this study
Conditioned pain modulation (CPM) a measure of the effectiveness of the descending pain pathway and therefore a measure of the body's ability to perform endogenous analgesia. In subjects with normal function of the descending pain pathway, the net-effect during CPM testing is anti-nociceptive, or inhibition of the ascending pain pathway. In those with impaired descending pain pathway function, the response to CPM testing is pro-nociceptive, indicating that the body is unable to inhibit the pain signal, or may even amplify it. There is literature that supports the presence of impaired CPM, and therefore impaired descending pain pathway function, in numerus chronic pain conditions, including low back pain. Impaired descending pain pathway function may be contributing to this chronic pain presentation. This study will give us information on whether a typical physical therapy plan of care is able to improve impaired CPM, and if CPM values are predictive of improvement in physical therapy.
Sponsor: Brooke Army Medical Center
You may qualify if…
- ✓ DEERS eligible
- ✓ English speaking
- ✓ Age 18-64 years
- ✓ ODI baseline ≥25%
- ✓ NPRS baseline ≥3/10
- ✓ Low back pain symptoms greater than 3 months
- ✓ Must be able to commit to at least six weeks of physical therapy interventions
You may not qualify if…
- ✕ Serious spinal pathology (acute fracture, active cancer, inflammation, inflammatory arthropathy)
- ✕ Low back pain symptoms radiating below the knee
- ✕ Pregnancy
- ✕ Diagnosed neurological disease including traumatic brain injury, multiple sclerosis, chronic regional pain syndrome, and fibromyalgia.
- ✕ History spinal surgery
- ✕ Currently under litigation related to low back pain
- ✕ Currently going through Medical Evaluation Board (MEB)
- ✕ Retiring or separating from the military within a year
Where it's recruiting
Fort Sam Houston
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · NCT06544525 · last updated 2025-04-23