Abstract
Introduction
The annual mortality and national expense of the opioid crisis
continue to rise in the USA (130 deaths/day, $50 billion/year). Opioid
use disorder usually starts with the prescription of opioids for a
medical condition. Its risk is associated with greater pain intensity
and coping strategies characterised by pain catastrophising.
Non-pharmacological analgesics in the hospital setting are critical to
abate the opioid epidemic. One promising intervention is virtual reality
(VR) therapy. It has performed well as a distraction tool and pain
modifier during medical procedures; however, little is known about VR in
the acute pain setting following traumatic injury. Furthermore, no
studies have investigated VR in the setting of traumatic brain injury
(TBI). This study aims to establish the safety and effect of VR therapy
in the inpatient setting for acute traumatic injuries, including
TBI.
Methods and analysis
In this randomised within-subjects clinical study, immersive VR
therapy will be compared with two controls in patients with traumatic
injury, including TBI. Affective measures including pain
catastrophising, trait anxiety and depression will be captured prior to
beginning sessions. Before and after each session, we will capture pain
intensity and unpleasantness, additional affective measures and
physiological measures associated with pain response, such as heart rate
and variability, pupillometry and respiratory rate. The primary outcome
is the change in pain intensity of the VR session compared with
controls.
Ethics and dissemination
Dissemination of this protocol will allow researchers and funding
bodies to stay abreast in their fields through exposure to research not
otherwise widely publicised. Study protocols are compliant with federal
regulation and University of Maryland Baltimore’s Human Research
Protections and Institutional Review Board (protocol number
HP-00090603). Study results will be published on completion of enrolment
and analysis, and deidentified data can be shared by request to the
corresponding author.
Trial registration number
NCT04356963; Pre-results.
Cited by
3 articles.
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