Pain Apprehension Reactivation of Movement (PARAM): A Virtual Reality–Driven Cognitive Reconditioning Model for Movement-Related Fear in Chronic Pain Rehabilitation
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.48047/13z65272Keywords:
Chronic pain, Virtual reality, Fear-avoidance, Long COVID, Cognitive-behavioral therapy, Pain neuroscience education, RehabilitationAbstract
Chronic non-specific low back pain (CNSLBP) often leads to maladaptive pain-related fear and movement avoidance, perpetuating disability and deconditioning. PARAM (Pain Apprehension Re-Activation of Movement) is a novel virtual reality (VR)-driven, cognitive reconditioning intervention designed to address this cycle by integrating principles of the Fear-Avoidance Model, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), and pain neuroscience education (PNE). PARAM was tested among silk weavers with Long COVID–related musculoskeletal pain in Tamil Nadu, India—a group uniquely affected by prolonged inactivity, kinesiophobia, and persistent pain. The intervention comprises four structured phases: real-world movement assessment, VR-based graded movement exposure, visual cognitive reprocessing, and real-world reintegration. Immersive VR enables patients to safely confront feared movements, recalibrate maladaptive beliefs, and regain functional confidence through controlled exposure and real-time feedback. A quasi-experimental trial with 70 participants demonstrated significant reductions in fear-avoidance beliefs (48% vs. 16% in controls), pain catastrophizing (42% improvement), and increased pain self-efficacy (78%). These promising outcomes highlight PARAM’s potential as a scalable digital therapeutic, especially relevant in the post-pandemic era for workers in high-risk occupations. By bridging exposure therapy and VR, PARAM addresses the biopsychosocial roots of chronic pain and may redefine conventional rehabilitation pathways. Future research should validate long-term efficacy, explore home-based VR delivery, and expand its application across diverse chronic pain populations. PARAM offers an innovative, patient-centered strategy to break the fear-avoidance cycle and restore movement confidence in chronic pain rehabilitation.
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