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The purpose of this research is to compare two different approaches for treating patients with achilles tendinopathy: eccentric exercise, stretching and manual therapy VS Electric dry needling, eccentric exercise, stretching and manual therapy. Physical therapists commonly use all of these techniques to treat achilles tendinopathy. This study is attempting to find out if one treatment strategy is more effective than the other.
Full description
Patients with achilles tendinopathy will be randomized to receive 8-10 treatments (1-2 treatments per week) over 6 weeks (10 treatments max) of either: (1)Eccentric exercise, stretching, manual therapy and electrical dry needling or 2. eccentric exercise, stretching and manual therapy
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Inclusion criteria
Adult >18 years old that is able to speak English.
Report of at least 3 months of Achilles pain clinically diagnosed as Achilles tendonitis or Achilles tendinopathy
Patient has not had physical therapy, massage therapy, chiropractic treatment or injections for Achilles pain in the last 6 months:
Diagnosis of noninsertional tendinopathy, defined as the following
Exclusion criteria
Report of red flags to manual physical therapy to include: hypertension infection, diabetes, peripheral neuropathy, heart disease, stroke, chronic ischemia, edema, severe vascular disease, malignancy, etc.
History of previous Achilles tendon surgery, ankle arthrodesis, hind foot fracture, or leg length discrepancy of more than one half inch.
History of arthrosis or arthritis of the ankle and/or foot.
History of significant ankle and/or foot instability
Two or more positive neurologic signs consistent with nerve root compression, including any two of the following:
Involvement in litigation or worker's compensation regarding foot pain
Any condition that might contraindicate the use of electro-needling
The patient is pregnant.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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110 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Raymond Butts, DPT PhD; James Dunning, DPT
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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