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This study will test whether one session of therapeutic ultrasound can immediately reduce muscle stiffness and pain in adults with neck pain. Participants aged 18-50 years who report neck pain of at least 3 out of 10 will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: (1) active ultrasound or (2) sham ultrasound. Both groups will receive the same 10-minute procedure with the probe moved slowly over the painful neck muscles; however, the sham device will not deliver ultrasound energy. Before and right after the session, we will measure passive muscle stiffness at standard points on the neck and shoulder muscles using a handheld device and will record pain intensity on a 0-10 scale. We will also record the Neck Disability Index on the same day. The main question is whether active ultrasound produces a larger immediate decrease in muscle stiffness than sham. We will also examine changes in pain and neck function. The session is performed by trained physiotherapists in a clinic setting. Potential risks are minimal (such as temporary warmth or mild skin redness). There is no cost to participate. Results may help guide safe, non-drug treatment options for neck pain.
Full description
Background and Rationale. Therapeutic ultrasound is commonly used to manage musculoskeletal pain and stiffness, yet immediate, objective effects on cervical muscle stiffness are not well established. This trial evaluates whether a single session of continuous ultrasound produces a greater immediate reduction in passive cervical muscle stiffness and pain than a sham procedure.
Study Design. Single-session, parallel-group, randomized, sham-controlled clinical trial (1:1). Masking: participants and outcomes assessor (double-blind). Primary purpose: treatment. Setting: outpatient physiotherapy clinics at Erzurum (university/affiliated hospital).
Participants. Adults 18-50 years with neck pain and baseline pain ≥3/10 on a 0-10 scale. Key exclusions include neurological signs suggesting radiculopathy, pregnancy, pacemaker, open skin lesions/infection at the treatment area, and invasive neck treatment within the past 6 weeks.
Interventions.
Active ultrasound: Continuous therapeutic ultrasound applied to painful/stiff cervical musculature (e.g., upper trapezius and suboccipital/cervical extensors) for ~10 minutes. Frequency 1-3 MHz; intensity 1.0-1.5 W/cm² (adjusted to tolerance); slow, overlapping circular probe movement with standard coupling gel.
Sham ultrasound: Identical device appearance, probe movement, contact time, and instructions, but no acoustic output.
Outcomes and Timing.
Primary outcome: Change in passive muscle stiffness (N/m) measured with a handheld myotonometer at predefined points (e.g., sternocleidomastoid, upper/middle/lower trapezius, cervical extensors), averaged over three taps per site.
Secondary outcomes: Pain intensity (0-10) and Neck Disability Index (0-50). All measures are collected immediately before and immediately after the single treatment session during the same clinic visit.
Randomization and Allocation Concealment. A computer-generated sequence with variable block sizes will assign participants 1:1 to active or sham. Group assignments are concealed in sequentially numbered, opaque envelopes (or via a secure electronic system) opened immediately before treatment by a therapist not involved in outcome assessment.
Blinding. Participants are informed that two forms of ultrasound are being compared. The outcomes assessor is blinded to allocation. Therapists delivering the intervention do not perform outcome measurements.
Sample Size. The target sample is 24 participants (12 per group), which is feasible for a single-session, mechanistic trial and expected to detect a moderate to large between-group difference in immediate stiffness change for planning larger studies.
Statistical Analysis. Analyses will follow the intention-to-treat principle. The primary analysis compares pre-to-post change in stiffness between groups using an analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) with baseline stiffness as a covariate. Secondary outcomes are analyzed similarly. Effect sizes and 95% confidence intervals will be reported. Missing post values (if any) will be handled with appropriate single-visit imputation (e.g., baseline-carried-forward sensitivity analysis).
Safety Monitoring. Ultrasound settings follow standard safety guidelines. Expected minor, transient events include warmth or mild skin redness. Adverse events are recorded throughout the visit; any unexpected event stops the session and triggers medical review.
Data Management. Paper/electronic case report forms are stored in locked/secured systems; records are coded with unique IDs. Only authorized personnel have access. Data are retained per institutional policy.
Participant Timeline. Screening and consent → baseline assessments → randomization → one treatment session (~10 minutes) → immediate post-treatment assessments → discharge and adverse-event check.
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Inclusion criteria
Neck pain with baseline intensity ≥ 3/10 on a 0-10 scale
Able to understand the study procedures and provide written informed consent
No invasive neck treatment within the past 6 weeks
Exclusion criteria
Open wounds, infection, or severe skin disease at the treatment area
Pregnancy or implanted pacemaker
Acute cervical trauma or fracture history
Use of other neck-targeted physical therapies or analgesic procedures on the day of assessment
Any condition judged by the investigators to interfere with safe ultrasound application or outcome measurements
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
24 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Esedullah Akaras, Phd.PT
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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