Relaxation intervention to improve diabetic foot ulcer healing: Results from a pilot randomized controlled study

This pilot randomised controlled study (RCT) aimed to assess the feasibility and acceptability of a progressive muscle relaxation with guided imagery intervention (experimental group [EG]) compared to a neutral guided imagery placebo (active control group [ACG]) and standard care to diabetic foot ulcer [DFU] treatment (passive control group [PCG]), to decide on the need for a definitive RCT. Diabetic foot patients with one or two chronic DFU and significant levels of stress/anxiety/depression were recruited and assessed during a period of 6 months, at three moments. Primary outcomes: feasibility rates and satisfaction with relaxation sessions. Secondary outcomes: DFU healing score, DFU‐related quality of life (DFUQoL), physical and mental HRQoL, stress and emotional distress, DFU representations, arterial blood pressure, and heart rate. A total of 146 patients completed the baseline (T0) assessment with 54 participants presenting significant distress being randomised into three groups. Patients were assessed 2 months post‐intervention (T1) and 4 months after T1 (T2). Feasibility rates showed reduced values on eligibility, recruitment and inclusion in the study, although with an acceptable rate of refusal lower than 10%. On average, participants reported being satisfied with relaxation sessions and recommended them to other patients. Differences between groups showed that, at T1, PCG participants reported higher levels of stress than those from EG and ACG. Within‐group differences showed improvements in stress, distress, DFUQoL and DFU extent over time only in EG and ACG. Only EG showed significant changes in DFU representations at T1. The results suggest that relaxation may be a promising coping strategy to deal with DFU distress and an important adjuvant therapy for DFU healing, supporting the implementation of a definitive RCT.

[1]  E. Mudge,et al.  Psychological Stress on Wound Healing: A Silent Player in a Complex Background. , 2022, The international journal of lower extremity wounds.

[2]  M. Edmonds,et al.  Approach to a New Diabetic Foot Ulceration , 2020 .

[3]  S. Skeie,et al.  Effect of a telemedicine intervention for diabetes-related foot ulcers on health, well-being and quality of life: secondary outcomes from a cluster randomized controlled trial (DiaFOTo) , 2020, BMC Endocrine Disorders.

[4]  Hong‐Lin Chen,et al.  The Incidence of Depression in Patients With Diabetic Foot Ulcers: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis , 2020, The international journal of lower extremity wounds.

[5]  Benjamin A Lipsky,et al.  Practical Guidelines on the prevention and management of diabetic foot disease (IWGDF 2019 update) , 2020, Diabetes/metabolism research and reviews.

[6]  F. Pouwer,et al.  Psychosocial research in the diabetic foot: Are we making progress? , 2019, Diabetes/metabolism research and reviews.

[7]  J. Sim,et al.  Health-related quality of life among adults living with diabetic foot ulcers: a meta-analysis , 2018, Quality of Life Research.

[8]  Rui Carvalho,et al.  Predictors of quality of life in patients with diabetic foot ulcer: The role of anxiety, depression, and functionality , 2018, Journal of health psychology.

[9]  Luciana Regina Ferreira da Mata,et al.  Jacobson and Truax Method: evaluation of the clinical effectiveness of a home care program after prostatectomy 1 , 2018, Revista latino-americana de enfermagem.

[10]  H. Tchero,et al.  Telemedicine in Diabetic Foot Care: A Systematic Literature Review of Interventions and Meta-analysis of Controlled Trials , 2017, The international journal of lower extremity wounds.

[11]  E. Broadbent,et al.  The effects of psychological interventions on wound healing: A systematic review of randomized trials. , 2017, British journal of health psychology.

[12]  H. Thorsen,et al.  Diabetic complications do not hamper improvement of health-related quality of life over the course of treatment of diabetic foot ulcers - the Eurodiale study. , 2017, Journal of diabetes and its complications.

[13]  Sicco A Bus,et al.  Diabetic Foot Ulcers and Their Recurrence. , 2017, The New England journal of medicine.

[14]  M. Malek,et al.  The effect of progressive muscle relaxation on glycated hemoglobin and health-related quality of life in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. , 2017, Applied nursing research : ANR.

[15]  Sabah M. Ebrahem,et al.  Effect of relaxation therapy on depression, anxiety, stress and quality of life among diabetic patients , 2017 .

[16]  M. Campbell,et al.  CONSORT 2010 statement: extension to randomised pilot and feasibility trials , 2016, British Medical Journal.

[17]  E. Starostina,et al.  Prevalence and Prognostic Value of Depression and Anxiety in Patients with Diabetic Foot Ulcers and Possibilities of their Treatment. , 2016, Current diabetes reviews.

[18]  Jenna Reps,et al.  Illness Beliefs Predict Mortality in Patients with Diabetic Foot Ulcers , 2016, PloS one.

[19]  Hotma Rumahorbo,et al.  Progressive Muscle Relaxation Effectiveness of the Blood Sugar Patients with Type 2 Diabetes , 2016 .

[20]  A. Lerdal,et al.  Trajectories of illness perceptions in persons with chronic illness: An explorative longitudinal study , 2015, Journal of health psychology.

[21]  E. Weledji,et al.  The Diabetic Foot , 2015 .

[22]  N. Lunet,et al.  Cross-cultural adaptation and validation of the health literacy assessment tool METER in the Portuguese adult population. , 2014, Patient education and counseling.

[23]  E. Boyko,et al.  The independent contribution of diabetic foot ulcer on lower extremity amputation and mortality risk. , 2014, Journal of diabetes and its complications.

[24]  D. Bates,et al.  Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4 , 2014, 1406.5823.

[25]  S. Bornstein,et al.  Improving major amputation rates in the multicomplex diabetic foot patient: focus on the severity of peripheral arterial disease , 2013, Therapeutic advances in endocrinology and metabolism.

[26]  D. Torgerson,et al.  Sample size calculations for pilot randomized trials: a confidence interval approach. , 2013, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[27]  E. Broadbent,et al.  The psychology of wound healing , 2012, Current opinion in psychiatry.

[28]  R. Booth,et al.  A brief relaxation intervention reduces stress and improves surgical wound healing response: A randomised trial , 2012, Brain, Behavior, and Immunity.

[29]  D. Ståhl,et al.  Five-year follow-up of a cohort of people with their first diabetic foot ulcer: the persistent effect of depression on mortality , 2012, Diabetologia.

[30]  J. Kiecolt-Glaser,et al.  The impact of psychological stress on wound healing: methods and mechanisms. , 2011, Immunology and allergy clinics of North America.

[31]  Miguel Trigo,et al.  Estudo das propriedades psicométricas da Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) na população portuguesa , 2010 .

[32]  N. Cullum,et al.  Coping style and depression influence the healing of diabetic foot ulcers: observational and mechanistic evidence , 2010, Diabetologia.

[33]  Tushar Sakpal,et al.  Sample Size Estimation in Clinical Trial , 2010, Perspectives in clinical research.

[34]  J. Marôco,et al.  Patients’ illness schemata of hypertension: The role of beliefs for the choice of treatment , 2010, Psychology & health.

[35]  Almir Del Prette,et al.  Significância clínica e mudança confiável na avaliação de intervenções psicológicas , 2008 .

[36]  K. Birkeland,et al.  A longitudinal study of patients with diabetes and foot ulcers and their health-related quality of life: wound healing and quality-of-life changes. , 2008, Journal of diabetes and its complications.

[37]  Gianluca Castelnuovo,et al.  Relaxation training for anxiety: a ten-years systematic review with meta-analysis , 2008, BMC psychiatry.

[38]  L. Uccioli,et al.  Prediction of outcome in individuals with diabetic foot ulcers: focus on the differences between individuals with and without peripheral arterial disease. The EURODIALE Study , 2008, Diabetologia.

[39]  Jennifer E. Graham,et al.  Stress and Wound Healing , 2007, Neuroimmunomodulation.

[40]  J. Woo,et al.  Effects of relaxation therapy on psychologic distress and symptom status in older Chinese patients with heart failure. , 2007, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[41]  A. Martins,et al.  Validation study of a Portuguese version of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale , 2007, Psychology, health & medicine.

[42]  K. Birkeland,et al.  A comparison of the health-related quality of life in patients with diabetic foot ulcers, with a diabetes group and a nondiabetes group from the general population , 2007, Quality of Life Research.

[43]  A. Boulton,et al.  The global burden of diabetic foot disease , 2005, The Lancet.

[44]  M. Huijberts,et al.  Health-related quality of life of diabetic foot ulcer patients and their caregivers , 2005, Diabetologia.

[45]  B. Wampold,et al.  The placebo is powerful: estimating placebo effects in medicine and psychotherapy from randomized clinical trials. , 2005, Journal of clinical psychology.

[46]  N. Schaper,et al.  Diabetic foot ulcer classification system for research purposes: a progress report on criteria for including patients in research studies , 2004, Diabetes/Metabolism Research Reviews.

[47]  G. Chrousos,et al.  Implementation of a stress management program in outpatients with type 2 diabetes mellitus: a randomized controlled trial , 2002, Hormones.

[48]  A. Kalker,et al.  Effect of biofeedback-assisted relaxation training on foot ulcer healing. , 2001, Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association.

[49]  M. Johnston,et al.  Construct validation of the hospital anxiety and depression scale with clinical populations. , 2000, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[50]  N. Black CONSORT , 1996, The Lancet.

[51]  A. Boulton,et al.  Management of Foot Problems in Diabetes , 1996, Peritoneal dialysis international : journal of the International Society for Peritoneal Dialysis.

[52]  D. Watson,et al.  Constructing validity: Basic issues in objective scale development , 1995 .

[53]  N. Jacobson,et al.  Clinical significance: a statistical approach to defining meaningful change in psychotherapy research. , 1991, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[54]  Ellen Piel Cook,et al.  Gender and Psychological Distress , 1990 .

[55]  C. Dolea,et al.  World Health Organization , 1949, International Organization.

[56]  Saraswathy Venkataraman,et al.  Gender and Mental health , 2013 .

[57]  Nikolaos Pandis,et al.  Randomization. Part 3: allocation concealment and randomization implementation. , 2012, American journal of orthodontics and dentofacial orthopedics : official publication of the American Association of Orthodontists, its constituent societies, and the American Board of Orthodontics.

[58]  F. Branco,et al.  Estudo das propriedades psicométricas da Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) na população portuguesa , 2010 .

[59]  D. Mathieu,et al.  Non-Healing Wounds , 2006 .

[60]  P. Ferreira A medição do estado de saúde: criação da versão portuguesa do MOS SF-36 , 1998 .

[61]  C. Herrmann International experiences with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale--a review of validation data and clinical results. , 1997, Journal of psychosomatic research.