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Effect of Cervical Traction on Balance in Cervical Radiculopathy

U

University of Monastir

Status

Completed

Conditions

Balance Disorders
Cervical Radiculopathy

Treatments

Other: Rehabilitation
Other: Cervical traction

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

A randomized clinical trial aiming to assess the effect of cervical traction, using different loads, on balance parameters among patients with common cervical radiculopathy.

Authors hypothesized that as cervical traction alleviate radicular pain and improve function it may also improve patient balance parameters. Three different loads of traction are compared Main outcome measures are balance parameters (clinical and stabilometric). Patients are followed for during six months.

Full description

A randomized clinical trial was designed to assess the effect of cervical intermittent traction on balance parameters among patients diagnosed with common cervical neuropathy. The diagnosis is confirmed or made by a physical medicine and rehabilitation physician with 15 Y of experience treating musculoskeletal disorders especially cervical neuropathy. Enrolled patients are randomly assigned to one of three groups (A, B and C). Patients are treated with 2 Kg load intermittent cervical traction (A), 8 kg (B) and 12 kg (C). Patients in the three groups are treated additionnally with 12 rehabilitation sessions. Patients are assessed at baseline, at the end of the treatment (1 month), and at 3 and 6 months. Outcomes are mainly clinical balance assessment and stabilometry, and secondary, epidemiological parameters, pain intensity (VAS), cervical spine ROM and proprioception, grip strength, cervical spinal muscle strength, functional status (NDI), the psychological distress (HAD), and Quality of life All parameters are assessed at the Three follow-up points.

Enrollment

36 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • CR evolving for at least 3 months Well tolerated manual cervical traction test.

Exclusion criteria

  • Rehabilitation or chiropractic treatment for head or neck pain within the previous 3 months.
  • neurological and/or rheumatic diseases involving the cervical spine or which may result in impaired balance.
  • Surgery or traumatic damage to the cervical spine.
  • Ear, Nose and Throat pathology and ophthalmological disorders causing a balance disorder.
  • Diabetes at the stage of neurovegetative complications
  • Cardiac arrhythmia
  • Neurological impairments (balance disorders, motor and/or sensory deficits).
  • Severe osteoporosis or long-term treatment with corticosteroids .

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

36 participants in 3 patient groups

Group A
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Patients in group A recieved cervical traction with 2 kg load combined with standard rehabilitation program. This group is condidered as sham because the 2 kg load does not have any effect on anatomical structures of the cervical spine.
Treatment:
Other: Cervical traction
Other: Rehabilitation
Group B
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients in group B recieved cervical traction with 8 kg load combined with standard rehabilitation program. The traction load in this group has an effect on muscular structures of the cervical spine without any actual effect on the remaining anatomical structures (intervertabral disks, joints and ligaments).
Treatment:
Other: Cervical traction
Other: Rehabilitation
Group C
Experimental group
Description:
Patients in group C recieved cervical traction with 12 kg load combined with standard rehabilitation program. The traction load in this group has an actual effect on muscles, intervertabral disks, joints, and ligaments of the cervical spine.
Treatment:
Other: Cervical traction
Other: Rehabilitation

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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