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Dry Needling, Manipulation and Stretching vs. Manual Therapy, Exercise and Ultrasound for Lateral Epicondylalgia

A

Alabama Physical Therapy & Acupuncture

Status

Completed

Conditions

Lateral Epicondylitis

Treatments

Other: manual therapy, exercise, ultrasound
Other: Dry Needling, manipulation, stretching

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03167710
AAMT0010

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this research is to compare two different approaches for treating patients with lateral epicondylalgia: electric dry needling, thrust manipulation and stretching versus impairment-based manual therapy, exercise and ultrasound. Physical therapists commonly use all of these techniques to treat lateral epicondyalgia. This study is attempting to find out if one treatment strategy is more effective than the other.

Full description

Patients with epicondyalgia will be randomized to receive 2 treatment sessions per week for 4 weeks (up to 8 sessions total) of either: (1) electric dry needling, thrust manipulation and stretching or (2) impairment-based manual therapy, exercise and ultrasound

Enrollment

143 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 60 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Adult between 18 and 60 years old that is able to speak English.

  2. Report of at least 6 weeks of elbow (i.e. lateral epicondyle) and dorsal forearm pain, consistent with lateral epicondylitis:

  3. Patient has not had physical therapy, massage therapy, chiropractic treatment or injections for elbow pain in the last 6 months:

  4. Diagnosis of lateral epicondylitis, defined as two of more of the following:

    1. Pain on palpation over the lateral epicondyle and the associated common extensor unit
    2. Pain on gripping a hand dynamometer
    3. Pain with stretching or contraction of the wrist extensor muscles

Exclusion criteria

  1. Report of red flags to manual physical therapy to include: severe hypertension, infection, uncontrolled diabetes, peripheral neuropathy, heart disease, stroke, chronic ischemia, edema, severe varicosities, tumor, metabolic disease, prolonged steroid use, fracture, RA, osteoporosis, severe vascular disease, malignancy, etc.

  2. Report of Previous surgery of the elbow, history of elbow dislocation, elbow fracture and/or tendon rupture

  3. Report of systemic neurological disorders and/or neurological deficits to include the following:

    1. Nerve root compression (muscle weakness involving a major muscle group of the upper extremity, diminished upper extremity deep tendon reflex, or diminished or absent sensation to pinprick in any upper extremity dermatome)
    2. Cervical spinal stenosis (exhibited bilateral upper extremity symptoms)
    3. Central nervous system involvement (hyperreflexia, sensory disturbances in the hand, intrinsic muscle wasting of the hands, unsteadiness during walking, nystagmus, loss of visual acuity, impaired sensation of the face, altered taste, the presence of pathological reflexes)
    4. History of whiplash injury within the previous 6 weeks
  4. History of surgery to the head/neck or affected upper extremity.

  5. Psychiatric disorders or cognitively impaired

  6. Pregnancy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

143 participants in 2 patient groups

dry needling, manipulation stretching
Experimental group
Treatment:
Other: Dry Needling, manipulation, stretching
manual therapy, exercise, ultrasound
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Other: manual therapy, exercise, ultrasound

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Raymond Butts, DPT PhD; James Dunning, DPT

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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