Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLeona Simpson Modified over 9 years ago
2
Phantom Limb Pain Marc Johnson
3
Rationale, Purpose, and Summary Personal connection to this topic and this pain is common in a majority of amputees The purpose of this study was to evaluate the successfulness of mirror therapy on amputee patients This study looked at 80 amputees. 39 were part of the control and 41 part of mirror therapy.
4
Background Information It is not fully understood why phantom limb pain is felt in amputees. What is Mirror Therapy? Mirror Therapy is not fully understood but there are many theories on why it has been successful for some patients.
5
Nursing Care Problem Very prevalent in patients who undergo an amputation. Lack of understanding. Patient education is necessary.
6
Nursing Theory Gate Control Theory Written in 1965 by Melzack and Wall It describes a gate located in the spinal cord that opens and closes which modifies the perception of pain Melzack suggests that a psychological factor plays a role in pain perception. Things that can close the gate Medication Being in a good mood Concentrating on things other then the injury
7
Methods & Results This study included 80 amputee patients (41 mirror therapy and 39 control group). Participants were asked to perform 10 different exercise Both the control and test groups had more control over pain. Mirror therapy does not reduce phantom limb pain any more than exercises on there own.
8
Critique A larger test pool could have been used. Grouping amputation types (Ex. All elective leg amputation in one group) A follow up study to see if phantom pain returned on patients who found relief using mirror therapy.
9
Patient Care Design Nurses would collaborate with: A orthotic and prosthetic specialist Pain specialist Physical and occupational therapy Therapist
10
Nursing Diagnosis Chronic pain related to phantom limb sensation/pain Nursing interventions Education on the variety of therapies offered Pain medications Learn if there is a trigger to the pain along with location, duration, and level of pain
11
Advocate Role This pain might be hard to understand and may be hard for the patient to explain but the pain is real and pain medication should be administered. Every patient is different Often pain is described as shooting, stabbing, burning, cramping. Education
12
References Brodie, E., Whyte, A., Niven, C. (2007). Analgiea through the looking glass? A randomized controlled trial investigating the effects of viewing a virtual limb upon phantom limb pain, sensation and movement. European Journal of Pain, 11, 428-436.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.