ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Acute Effects of Hot-Pack Therapy in Low Back Pain (HOTPACK-LBP)

E

Erzurum Technical University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Back Pain
Low Back Pain

Treatments

Device: Hot-Pack
Device: Sham Pack

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07242183
ETU-PMR-HOTPACK-2025-RCT-v3

Details and patient eligibility

About

This single-centre, parallel-group randomized controlled trial will test whether one session of moist hot-pack therapy produces immediate improvements in pain intensity and lumbar erector spinae muscle stiffness in adults with nonspecific low back pain. Participants are randomized 1:1 to hot-pack or sham (room-temperature pack). Outcomes are assessed at baseline and immediately after the session using VAS (0-10 cm) and MyotonPro; a short follow-up (24-48 h) captures Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and perceived change. The intervention is brief, low-risk, and commonly used in clinical practice, yet high-quality evidence on its acute effects is limited.

Full description

Rationale. Hot-pack (thermotherapy) is frequently prescribed to reduce pain and muscle tension in low back pain, but controlled evidence quantifying immediate changes in muscle mechanical properties and pain remains scarce. Demonstrating short-term benefits with objective measures (MyotonPro) and validated scales (VAS, ODI) could inform pragmatic care pathways for nonspecific low back pain.

Objectives and Hypotheses. Primary objective: determine whether a single hot-pack session reduces erector spinae stiffness (MyotonPro) and pain (VAS) versus sham. Secondary objective: explore short-term effects on functional disability (ODI) and perceived improvement. We hypothesize greater immediate reductions in stiffness and pain, and better short-term function, with hot-pack versus sham.

Design and Setting. Prospective, two-arm, parallel RCT at Atatürk University Faculty of Medicine (Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation / Orthopedics). Target sample: 30 adults (pilot). Allocation is 1:1 using computer-generated randomization; outcome assessors and participants are blinded.

Participants. Adults 18-65 y with nonspecific/mechanical low back pain and baseline VAS ≥ 3/10. Key exclusions include pregnancy, pacemaker/implanted devices, recent lumbar surgery or heat/cold therapy (<6 weeks), dermatologic lesions, neurologic deficit, tumour, or systemic inflammatory disease. Written informed consent is obtained before any procedure.

Interventions.

Hot-pack (Active): Moist hot-pack at 60-65 °C applied over the lumbar region for 20 minutes with a 6-8 towel barrier. Skin is checked at minutes 5 and 10.

Sham (Comparator): Identical setup using a room-temperature pack (no heat).

Outcome Measures and Timing.

Primary: Change in pain intensity (VAS, 0-10 cm) from pre- to immediate post-intervention.

Key Secondary: Change in erector spinae stiffness (MyotonPro) from pre- to immediate post-intervention; ODI at 24-48 h; patient-reported perceived change.

Procedures. After screening and consent, baseline demographics and outcomes are recorded. MyotonPro measurements are taken over the lumbar erector spinae at L3-L4, 2-3 cm lateral, with three repeats per point and averaged. Post-session, VAS and MyotonPro are repeated; ODI and a brief perceived-change item are collected 24-48 h later. All assessments are performed by trained physiotherapists following device protocols and the Declaration of Helsinki.

Randomization, Masking, and Data Handling. Randomization is computer-assisted (1:1). Participants and assessors are blinded to group assignment via a sham procedure mirroring the active setup. Data are recorded with coded IDs and analysed with mixed-model repeated-measures ANOVA (group × time), reporting effect sizes and 95% CIs.

Enrollment

24 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adults aged 18-65 years

Nonspecific/mechanical low back pain (clinical diagnosis)

Baseline pain ≥3/10 on a 0-10 Visual Analogue Scale (VAS)

Able to understand procedures and provide written informed consent

Able to attend baseline, immediate post-session, and 24-48 h follow-up assessments

Exclusion criteria

  • Neurologic deficit, tumour, or systemic inflammatory disease

Prior lumbar spine surgery

Heat or cold therapy to the lumbar region within the past 6 weeks

Dermatologic lesions, open wounds, or skin conditions over the lumbar area

Contraindications to heat (e.g., impaired sensation/neuropathy over the area, severe circulatory disorders)

Pregnancy

Implanted electronic devices (e.g., pacemaker)

Inability to comply with the study schedule or procedures

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

24 participants in 2 patient groups

Hot-Pack Therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Single-session moist hot-pack applied to the lumbar region. Pack surface temperature ≈60-65 °C; 6-8 towel layers as barrier; total duration 20 minutes. Skin checks at minutes 5 and 10. Outcomes: pain (VAS) and erector spinae stiffness (MyotonPro) immediately post-session; ODI at 24-48 h
Treatment:
Device: Sham Pack
Device: Hot-Pack
Room-Temperature Pack (Sham)
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Single-session room-temperature pack applied to the lumbar region using the same setup as the active arm (identical towels/barrier, positioning, and timing) but without heat. Total duration 20 minutes. Outcomes measured on the same schedule. Maintains participant and assessor blinding.
Treatment:
Device: Sham Pack
Device: Hot-Pack

Trial contacts and locations

0

Loading...

Central trial contact

Sena ADANIR, MsC:PT; Esedullah AKARAS, Dr.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems