Efficacy of combined strategies of physical activity, diet and sleep disorders as treatment in patients with chronic shoulder pain. A systematic review
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
Physical activity
Fecha
2023-09-04Referencia bibliográfica
Hamed Hamed D, Struyf F, Pruimboom L and Navarro-Ledesma S (2023), Efficacy of combined strategies of physical activity, diet and sleep disorders as treatment in patients with chronic shoulder pain. A systematic review. Front. Physiol. 14:1221807. [doi: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1221807]
Patrocinador
University Chair in Clinical Psychoneuroimmunology (University of Granada and PNI Europe)Resumen
Introduction: The objective of this systematic review was to analyze the existing
scientific evidence on the influence of dietary strategies, exercise, and sleep
disorders on the symptomatology of patients with chronic shoulder pain, as
well as to assess the methodological quality of the literature collected.
Methods: The selection criteria were as follows: we included randomized controlled
clinical trials written in English that investigated the effects of such interventions in
patients with chronic shoulder pain and excluded studies where pre-operative
rehabilitation or rehabilitation combined with corticosteroid injections was
performed. We searched six databases Pubmed, Cochrane Library, Web of Science,
CINAHL, Sportdiscus and Scopus, using the keywords “shoulder pain,” “fasting,” “physical
therapy modalities,” “rehabilitation,” “exercise,” “circadian clocks,” and “chronic pain” to
select randomized controlled clinical trials conducted in humans and written in English.
The last search was conducted on 24/01/2023. (PROSPERO:CRD42023379925).
Results: We used the tool proposed by the Cochrane Handbook to assess the risk
of bias in the included studies of the 17 studies included, nine had a high risk of bias,
two studies had an unclear risk of bias, and the remaining six studies had a low risk
of bias. A total of 17 articles were selected, including 10 studies that showed a
positive influences of exercise on chronic shoulder pain and five studies that
showed a negative influence of sleep disorders on this patient profile. The
remaining two articles analyzed the influence of nutritional strategies and
metabolic problems in patients with chronic shoulder pain. The total sample
size of the 17 included articles amounted to 9,991 individuals.
Discussion: Studies confirm that exercise generates a hypoalgesic effect that
improves chronic shoulder pain, functionality, and quality of life. Although dietary
strategies and sleep disorders are known to influence chronic shoulder pain, there
is a lack of studies that conduct interventions on these problems to assess how
chronic shoulder pain varies.





