Exploring the use of immersive virtual reality in adults with chronic primary pain: a scoping review
Exploring the use of immersive virtual reality in adults with chronic primary pain: a scoping review
Background: The use of immersive virtual reality, wearing head mounted display, has recently increased for people with chronic pain, with no definitive conclusion of its efficacy on pain-related outcomes. Objective: To map the available evidence on the use of immersive virtual reality as intervention for adults with chronic primary pain, illustrating gap in knowledge and direct future research. Methods: The search was performed with a range of study designs, but only those written in English language. A search was created in CINAHL Plus, Medline, AMED, Embase, PsycINFO, ASSIA, Scopus, TripPro, CENTRAL and EmCare. Results: Thirty-two studies were included. Several chronic conditions were identified including chronic musculoskeletal pain and fibromyalgia. The immersive virtual reality mechanisms included distraction, physical exercises, mindfulness/biofeedback, graded exposure, hypnosis, neuromodulation, and multi-mechanisms, and all these mechanisms were associated with varied dose. The use of customised software, with wide range of head mounted displays were common in clinical setting with some degree of supervision. Motion sickness, head mounted display discomfort and technical issues affect the usability of immersive virtual reality leading to poor engagement and dropouts. Conclusions: The use of immersive virtual reality for chronic primary pain is in early stages with lack of consensus regarding the mechanisms and associated dose. Future research needs to address the need of customisation, clinical usability of head mounted display as well as safety strategies to enhance the uptake of immersive virtual reality technology in healthcare practice.
chronic primary pain, immersive, intervention, Scoping review, virtual reality
Astek, Anfal
7b19adfe-8f7d-4c20-bc23-447d579b39fc
Sparkes, Valerie
7ddd0ce0-29db-4fdf-8a6c-140352979eb6
Sheeran, Liba
ad753e79-56c8-483f-aae5-dd992496bee2
2024
Astek, Anfal
7b19adfe-8f7d-4c20-bc23-447d579b39fc
Sparkes, Valerie
7ddd0ce0-29db-4fdf-8a6c-140352979eb6
Sheeran, Liba
ad753e79-56c8-483f-aae5-dd992496bee2
Astek, Anfal, Sparkes, Valerie and Sheeran, Liba
(2024)
Exploring the use of immersive virtual reality in adults with chronic primary pain: a scoping review.
Digital Health, 10.
(doi:10.1177/20552076241254456).
Abstract
Background: The use of immersive virtual reality, wearing head mounted display, has recently increased for people with chronic pain, with no definitive conclusion of its efficacy on pain-related outcomes. Objective: To map the available evidence on the use of immersive virtual reality as intervention for adults with chronic primary pain, illustrating gap in knowledge and direct future research. Methods: The search was performed with a range of study designs, but only those written in English language. A search was created in CINAHL Plus, Medline, AMED, Embase, PsycINFO, ASSIA, Scopus, TripPro, CENTRAL and EmCare. Results: Thirty-two studies were included. Several chronic conditions were identified including chronic musculoskeletal pain and fibromyalgia. The immersive virtual reality mechanisms included distraction, physical exercises, mindfulness/biofeedback, graded exposure, hypnosis, neuromodulation, and multi-mechanisms, and all these mechanisms were associated with varied dose. The use of customised software, with wide range of head mounted displays were common in clinical setting with some degree of supervision. Motion sickness, head mounted display discomfort and technical issues affect the usability of immersive virtual reality leading to poor engagement and dropouts. Conclusions: The use of immersive virtual reality for chronic primary pain is in early stages with lack of consensus regarding the mechanisms and associated dose. Future research needs to address the need of customisation, clinical usability of head mounted display as well as safety strategies to enhance the uptake of immersive virtual reality technology in healthcare practice.
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Accepted/In Press date: 23 April 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 August 2024
Published date: 2024
Keywords:
chronic primary pain, immersive, intervention, Scoping review, virtual reality
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 501572
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501572
ISSN: 2055-2076
PURE UUID: 259758bb-d73f-4233-83b6-ab875a7e207d
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Date deposited: 03 Jun 2025 17:11
Last modified: 13 Nov 2025 03:14
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Author:
Anfal Astek
Author:
Valerie Sparkes
Author:
Liba Sheeran
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