Association Between Sensory, Functional, Psychosocial, and Sleep Quality Factors in Individuals with Primary Frozen Shoulder Syndrome: A Cross-Sectional Study
adhesive capsulitis; bursitis; models biopsychosocial.
INTRODUCTION: Frozen shoulder contracture syndrome (SCOC) is a disease that insidiously manifests itself with progressive worsening of active and passive shoulder mobility accompanied by pain and stiffness. Psychological, psychosocial, and sleep quality aspects contribute to worsening pain and disability. OBJECTIVE: To analyze the association between sensory, functional, psychosocial, and sleep quality factors in Individuals with Primary Frozen Shoulder Syndrome in individuals with SCOC. METHODOLOGY: This is a cross-sectional study that will follow all the recommendations of Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) and will be developed in the virtual environment of the Google Meet© platform. Individuals aged between 18 and 65 years old, clinically diagnosed with SCOC (adhesive capsulitis/idiopathic frozen shoulder) will be included. EXPECTED RESULTS: The present study seeks to analyze the outcomes investigated (psychological, psychosocial factors, and sleep quality) influence sensory symptoms and self-reported function, adding to the existing knowledge in the literature that culminates in the pain and disability of this condition, so that new multidisciplinary approaches can be incorporated into the assessment aspects, as well as possible clinical questions involving interventional studies are listed with the factors studied in the present study, assisting in the treatment and therapeutic approaches aimed at this population, mainly in its primary characteristic.