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Effectiveness of Dry Needling for Improving Gait in the Patient With Multiple Sclerosis (DRYNEEDEM)

H

Hospital Universitario de Canarias

Status

Completed

Conditions

Multiple Sclerosis

Treatments

Other: sham dry needling + physiotherapy (standard/usual care)
Device: dry needling + physiotherapy (standard/usual care)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05956119
CHUC_2023_40

Details and patient eligibility

About

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic, inflammatory, autoimmune disease characterized by the appearance of lesions, characterized by heterogeneity in its pathological, clinical and radiological presentation. It has a significant socioeconomic impact, affecting interpersonal relationships and causing a significant reduction in quality of life.

Patients with MS suffer from a series of symptoms (ocular, spasticity, cerebellar, sensory, fatigue, depression) that may be independent of the course of the disease and their management significantly influences quality of life and also requires multidisciplinary therapeutic measures.

Physiotherapy and occupational therapy techniques are essential to reduce spasticity and prevent complications derived from it. Amongst physiotherapy techniques, we can find minimally invasive techniques such as dry needling which uses a fine filiform needle to penetrate the skin and mechanically break the myofascial trigger points, charactewrized by abnomral/pathological electrical activity. There have been previous studies with dry needling in stroke patients which have shown improvements in gait, but its effectiveness in other populations such as multiple sclerosis is still unclear.

In addition, dry needling has proven to be a cost-effective treatment for spasticity in patients with chronic and subacute stroke and could be an alternative to other pharmacological treatments, although more studies are necessary to compare both the effectiveness and the cost-effectiveness .

Recent studies carried out in patients with multiple sclerosis suggest that dry needling can improve mobility and gait speed. The main objective of the study is to analyze the effect of the application of a single session of dry needling in the lower limbs on the gait of patients with multiple sclerosis.

A prospective randomized parallel group clinical trial with blinded outcome assessment will be conducted. Participants will be recruited from the Hospital Universitario de Canarias.

Enrollment

18 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Having been diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis in a period of more than two years before the study starts
  2. Participate voluntarily and sign the informed consent.
  3. Suffering from some type of hypertonia or spasticity in MMII that makes walking difficult, measured with Expanded Disability Status Scale>2 (Pyramidal section >2)
  4. Age from 18 to 60 years old.
  5. Not having phobia of needles.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Not signing the informed consent.
  2. Having a phobia of needles.
  3. Presenting an outbreak at the start of the study or having presented any outbreak up to two months before the start of the study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

18 participants in 2 patient groups

dry needling
Experimental group
Description:
The intervention group will have a single session of dry nedling application in the medial gastrocnemius + usual care (physiotherapy)
Treatment:
Device: dry needling + physiotherapy (standard/usual care)
placebo
Sham Comparator group
Description:
The control group will have a single session of sham dry nedling in the medial gastrocnemius + usual care (physiotherapy)
Treatment:
Other: sham dry needling + physiotherapy (standard/usual care)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

ALBERTO JAVIER, PT, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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