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Efficacy of Manual Therapy in Plantar Fasciitis (MTPlantarF)

U

University of Valencia

Status

Completed

Conditions

Plantar Fasciitis

Treatments

Other: Massage muscle chain
Other: Manual Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Plantar fasciitis is characterized by localized pain at the insertion site of the plantar fascia on the calcaneus. The pain worsens in the morning with the first step of the foot, after resting or at the beginning of a workout, it can increase after intense activity and persist even when it stops. The first-line plantar fasciitis treatment is conservative. Although few studies have currently evaluated the effectiveness of physical therapy, it appears that the combination of several techniques is more effective than any technique used in isolation. The objective of this study is to know the results of two manual therapy treatments in terms of pain and functionality with a direct action on the plantar fascia.

Patients diagnosed with plantar fasciitis will be recruited. They will be randomly assigned into two intervention groups: Group 1 will receive a direct treatment on the plantar fascia and posterior aspect of the leg to relax and elongate the tissues. It will consist of manual therapy of the foot and ankle, treatment of the trigger points of the soleus muscle and plantar square, and also massage, and passive stretching and group 2 will receive a treatment with superficial massage based on a muscle chain protocol. It lasts 4 weeks, evaluations will be carried out at the beginning of treatment, at the end of the treatment and a follow-up one month. The evaluations will consist of pain on pressure, ankle goniometry, pain, lower limb functionality dynamic balance, function and daily activities and ankle ability scale.

Full description

Introduction Plantar fasciitis is characterized by localized pain at the insertion site of the plantar fascia on the calcaneus, which can radiate toward the medial edge of the foot. The pain worsens in the morning with the first step of the foot, after resting or at the beginning of a workout, it can increase after intense activity and persist even when it stops. These symptoms can lead to functional limitation and prolonged disability. It is one of the most common foot pathologies. The first-line plantar fasciitis treatment is conservative. Although few studies have currently evaluated the effectiveness of physical therapy, it appears that the combination of several techniques is more effective than any technique used in isolation.

The objective of this study is to know the results of two manual therapy treatments in terms of pain and functionality with a direct action on the plantar fascia.

Material and methods

Patients diagnosed with plantar fasciitis will be recruited. Patients will sign an explanatory informed consent for the project before starting it. All patients are volunteers. They will be randomly assigned into two intervention groups:

  • Group 1 will receive a direct treatment on the plantar fascia and posterior aspect of the leg to relax and elongate the tissues. It will consist of manual therapy of the foot and ankle, treatment of the trigger points of the soleus muscle and plantar square, and also massage, and passive stretching.
  • Group 2 will receive a treatment with superficial massage based on a muscle chain protocol.

The intervention consists of a 4-week application, evaluations will be carried out at the beginning of treatment, at the end of the treatment and a follow-up one month.

The evaluations will consist of pain on pressure using an algometer, ankle goniometry, pain and lower limb functionality with the validated Foot Function Index scale, dynamic balance using the Star Excursion Balance Test, evaluation of the function and daily activities with the Foot and ankle ability scale.

Enrollment

32 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age between 18 and 65 years old, diagnosed with plantar fasciitis.
  • Evolution of fasciitis greater than 1 month
  • Not being receiving any other type of physiotherapy treatment at the time of the study.

Exclusion criteria

  • Subjects showing tumor, lower limb fractures, rheumatoid arthritis, vascular disease, administration of corticosteroids for long periods of time, pregnancy, previous surgeries in the affected or scheduled surgeries during the study period.
  • Subjects who were not able to understand or respond to the evaluations of the study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

32 participants in 2 patient groups

Manual Therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Mobilization. Axial decoaptation, talar mobilization, global and specific articulatory mobilization of the foot, mobilization of the fibular head, femorotibial mobilization, hip mobilization. In addition, lumbar joint mobilization is applied. It lasted 20 minutes. Subsequently, Trigger Point Inhibition is applied. in the medial gastrocnemius, soleus, and square plantar muscles. Plantar fascia massage. A deep friction technique was applied longitudinally and transversely to the plantar fascia and the triceps surae. The duration was 5/10 minutes Passive stretching. Stretches were applied to the plantar fascia, the gastrocnemius muscles and the soleus muscles in order to relax these muscles. The duration was 5/10 minutes.
Treatment:
Other: Manual Therapy
Massage
Active Comparator group
Description:
Consist of gentle kneading and rubbing based on a muscle chain protocol (20 minutes), and the same trigger point Inhibition, plantar fascia massage, and passive stretching.
Treatment:
Other: Massage muscle chain

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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