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Effects of PIR With and Without Dry Needling on Heel Pain

R

Riphah International University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Heel Pain Syndrome

Treatments

Other: MET PIR with Dry Needling
Other: MET PIR without Dry Needling

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06074640
REC/0163Maham Khurshid

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of this research will be to determine the effects of Post Isometric relaxation exercises with and without dry needling of triceps surae MTrPs on heel pain, ankle ROM and foot function in chronic heel pain patients. The sample size calculated for this study was 42. The subjects will be divided in two groups, 21 subjects in PIR with dry needling group and 21 in PIR without dry needling group. Study duration will be of 6 months. Sampling technique applied will be non probability convenience sampling technique. Only patients who are 20 - 40 years old, have NPRS score of heel pain above 3 and have MTrPs in any of the triceps surae muscle on initial inspection are included. Tools used in the study are Goniometer, NPRS scale and Foot function Index. Data will be analyzed through SPSS 23.

Full description

A number of patients visit clinics with a common subjective complaint of heel pain, especially with advancing age. Chronic PHP is characterized by painful inferioromedial aspect of calcaeneum, tender to even palpation. Myofascial pain syndrome cause regional pain and its hallmark feature is the presence of trigger points in the affected muscles. Triggers points in triceps surae i.e. Gastro-soleus can generate symptoms in the vicinity or spill them over to heel, causing pain and restricted mobility. Manual therapy and acupuncture are tools to deactivate MTrPs whilst restoring the muscle to its normal length and full joint range of motion with exercises and stretches. Dry needling treats trigger points by disrupting the tender points; whereas Post isometric relaxation is a form of muscle energy technique that restores the stretch length of a shortened, hypertonic muscle thereby decreasing myofascial pain. The aim of current RCT will be to compare the effects of post isometric relaxation with and without dry needling for trigger points of triceps surae in chronic heel pain patients.

Former studies have been conducted to explore the effects of various conventional and complementary therapies for heel pain rehabilitation. These studies provide evidence for the effectiveness of Muscle energy techniques and dry needling, as isolated treatments, in improving outcome measures for heel pain. Sufficient evidence also supports the efficacy of manual therapies with dry needling for neck pain, low back pain, knee or shoulder pain etc but is scarce for heel pain cases. Our study will apply multimodal approach by combining conventional stretching exercise and MET PIR with dry needling. Evidence of such a study published previously is almost negligible for heel pain rehab

Enrollment

42 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 40 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 20 to 40 yrs
  • Both Genders (Males and Females)
  • Clinical diagnosis of plantar heel pain in accordance with ICFDH
  • Primary c/o unilateral heel pain on the inferomedial surface
  • Pain elicited with first steps after waking
  • Pain worsens on prolonged weight bearing or inactivity.
  • Complaint of Heel Pain ≥ 6 month (Chronic)
  • NPRS score of heel pain between scores above 3
  • Ankle dorsiflexion less than 10° with extended knee or less than 20° with flexed knee.
  • Presence of MTrPs in any of the triceps surae muscle (Gastrocnemius, soleus) on initial inspection

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with bilateral heel pain (may be systemic)
  • Heel pain with absence of trigger points in Triceps surae complex.
  • Participants diagnosed with serious causes of heel pain. (Ankle/foot fractures, Tumors etc)
  • Secondary causes of heel pain(Congenital deformity, systemic inflammatory, vascular or neurological disorders etc)
  • History of treatment for heel pain in the past 4 weeks
  • Persons contraindicated for Acupuncture/Dry Needling

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

42 participants in 2 patient groups

interventional group 1(MET PIR with Dry needling)
Experimental group
Description:
Participants of this group will be treated with a MET protocol, and a dry needling session for Calf muscles MTrPs. Home regimen of self stretches for Calf muscles and plantar fascia will be given to patients
Treatment:
Other: MET PIR with Dry Needling
interventional group II (MET PIR without dry needling)
Experimental group
Description:
participants will follow the same MET PIR exercises but without adjunct dry needling for Calf muscles. Home regimen of self stretches for Calf muscles and plantar fascia will be given to patients
Treatment:
Other: MET PIR without Dry Needling

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Faiza Ashraf, TDPT; Aruba Saeed, PHD*

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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