Phantom limb pain occurs when amputees experience painful sensations which seem to come from their missing limb.
Most amputees experience some pain after losing a limb, but for a third of cases it becomes very severe leading to poor quality of life, worse disability, poorer mental health and greater difficulty in prosthesis use than for amputees without phantom limb pain.
"Phantom limb pain is a difficult condition to treat that can seriously hinder patients' quality of life," said Max Ortiz Catalan from Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden.
Researchers placed sensors on the patients' stumps to detect muscular activity for the missing arm.
Also Read
The signals were then fed into a computer that decoded and used them to create an active virtual arm on a computer screen, representing the missing limb.
There were three parts to the therapy, which involved patients training the virtual limb, driving a virtual race car around a track using their phantom movements and copying the movements of an on-screen limb with their phantom movements in 12 two-hour treatment sessions.
Once they completed all 12 sessions they had follow-up interviews one, three and six months after their treatment.
The study is the first to follow-up patients with phantom limb pain as long as six months after their treatment.
The study found that on average the intensity, quality and frequency of phantom limb pain halved following treatment - with a 32 per cent reduction in the intensity of the pain, a 51 per cent reduction in pain quality and intensity and a 47 per cent reduction in its duration, frequency and intensity.
The number of patients feeling constant pain reduced from 12 to six patients at six month follow-up and 'stabbing' and 'tiring/exhausting' pains in the phantom limb were less common after the treatment.
The study was published in The Lancet journal.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content