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The aim of this study is verify the effectiveness of manual maneuver associated with stretching exercises in the treatment of Axillary Web Syndrome.
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Axillary Web Syndrome (AWS) is one of the short / medium-term sequela of surgical treatment for breast cancer with axillary dissection (AD) or sentinel lymph node biopsy (SLNB), with incidence reported in literature between 28% and 72%. AWS could be described as a thrombophlebitis of veno-lymph vessels due to a trauma of the region subjected to surgery, with the same characteristics of "Mondor's disease" diagnosed in post-traumatic and surgical areas where is a large presence of veno-lymphatic capillaries.
The syndrome onset occur in approximately 2-4 weeks after the surgery and its complete regression happen in 3-6 months after the onset. The clinical signs frequently described are pain and tension during movement in the axillary region, elbow, forearm and wrist, following the arm lymphatic pathway. Moreover, patients report difficulties in moving the arm into activities that require a moderate range of motion and could feel and see in the affected arm cords similar to a tendon. Even if the impairment can cause disability for a limited period of time, rehabilitation is usually advice to prevent further complications such as frozen shoulder, articular impeachment syndrome and long-term chronic pain, complications that could worsen patient's quality of life with a significant increase in costs and time to recovery.
Nowadays there are no studies in the literature that demonstrate the effectiveness of physiotherapy in AWS, with just case reports describing different treatments techniques, without a scientifically defined experimented rehabilitation protocol.
This experimental, monocentric, randomized clinical trial wants verify the effectiveness of a manual maneuver associated with stretching exercises in the treatment of AWS.
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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