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Mangement of Cervicogenic Headache by Maual Therapy

Cairo University (CU) logo

Cairo University (CU)

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

Cervicogenic Headache
Neck Pain Musculoskeletal

Treatments

Other: suboccipital myofacial release
Other: maitland mobilization
Other: combined myofacsial release with maitland mobilization

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07310823
CGH mangment

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to investigate immediate and short-term effect of combining suboccipital myofascial release with Maitland mobilization techniques on headache intensity, duration, and frequency, CFRT, upper cervical ROM, general neck mobility, and PPT of upper trapezius and suboccipital muscles.

Full description

Cervicogenic headache (CGH) was firstly defined by Ottar Sjaastad a Norwegian neurologist in 1980 as subtype of headache that is irritated by cervical spine movement . CHG is not a primary cause of headache, yet it is a specific type of headache that is caused by different structural abnormalities of the upper neck region leading to neck pain . Headache generally was documented as a high prevalent condition among people. It was classified into three main different types including migraine, tension type and CGH . CGH is common among patients that is responsible for 15-20% of all headache types .

The underlying pathophysiological mechanism of CGH includes any structural abnormality or irritation of the three upper cervical segments (c1, c2 and c3) and muscles supplied by their nerves which consequently led to unilateral referred pain around anatomical bone structures of head, occipital, frontal and temporal regions . Upper cervical pain is the main characteristic of CGH that is presented in 80 percent of the cases . CGH originate from musculoskeletal component disorders such as spine or muscles or disc and another component that aggravates neck pain and mainly arises from upper cervical and atlantooccipital joint that refers symptoms to head or temporal area .

Management of CGH includes pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatment. Regarding the pharmacological treatment, it may relieve pain efficiently, yet, it has many side effects on both short and long term. On the other side, non-pharmacological therapy has positive effects on both pain and function with minimal side effects. It includes manual therapy such as massage, spinal manipulation, and myofascial release, ROM exercises, stretching exercises, strengthening exercise and mobilization techniques aiming at pain relief and curing headache.

The effect of manual therapy had been suggested to be due to modifying sensitivity of the trigeminocervical nucleus . Additionally, myofascial release as a type of manual therapy is observed to relieve pain that is caused by restriction of soft tissue and reduce tissue load that improves eventually ROM (Tavakkoli et al., 2024). Specifically, the myofascial release for the suboccipital region aims at reliving stress and increasing elasticity of suboccipital muscles that were shortened or spasmed due to long and bad body habits such as forward head posture.

The effect of suboccipital release has been documented in different studies according to a systematic review . It improves pain and ROM in patients with CGH. It is used as an immediate pain killer in suboccipital region and improve ROM along cervical and disability of neck during functional activities through correct forward head abnormality.

Another manual therapy technique is Maitland mobilization that includes using oscillation movement at specific joint for enhancing and restoring normal accessory movement of that joint by gliding, rolling, and spinning movement within the joint and is graded according to the aim of treatment . It helps in maintaining normal mobility by normalizing friction between bundle of muscle and nearing structure to reduce pressure on sensitive areas and eventually improving pain and function.

However, there are many authors studied the effect of suboccipital release and the effect of Maitland mobilization on CGH patients, yet, to authors knowledge, there is no study investigated the immediate and short-term combined effect of both suboccipital release with Maitland mobilization. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the immediate and short-term effect of combining suboccipital release with Maitland mobilization on headache intensity, duration, and frequency, cervical flexion rotation test (CFRT), upper cervical ROM, general neck mobility, and pressure pain threshold (PPT) of upper trapezius and suboccipital muscles.

Statement of The Problem This study will be conducted to answer the following question: What is the immediate and short-term effect of combining suboccipital myofascial release with Maitland mobilization techniques on headache intensity, duration, and frequency, CFRT, upper cervical ROM, general neck mobility, and PPT of upper trapezius and suboccipital muscles.

Purpose of The Study This study aims to investigate immediate and short-term effect of combining suboccipital myofascial release with Maitland mobilization techniques on headache intensity, duration, and frequency, CFRT, upper cervical ROM, general neck mobility, and PPT of upper trapezius and suboccipital muscles.

Significance of The Study Headache affects about 66% of population leading to pain, function deterioration, work productivity reduction and increase cost on society. It negatively impacts quality of life .

Suboccipital myofascial release had been documented as an effective method for manging CGH through improve neck disability pain and cervical ROM even than mulligan technique. It is also more effective than conventional physical therapy in reducing pain and intensity of CGH .

On the other hand, Maitland mobilization has been used for a variety of pain and ROM management in mechanical neck pain and CGH. When it had been used combined with postural correction for CGH, it improved pain and function disability more than conventional physical therapy.

As previously mentioned, there are many authors studied the effect of suboccipital release and the effect of Maitland mobilization solely on CGH patients, yet, to authors knowledge, there is no published studies on the immediate nor the short-term effect of combining suboccipital release with Maitland mobilization. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the immediate and short-term effect of combining suboccipital myofascial release with Maitland mobilization on headache intensity, duration, and frequency, CFRT, upper cervical ROM, general neck mobility, and PPT of upper trapezius and suboccipital muscles.

This study will improve the understanding of effective treatments for managing CGH. By examining the combination of soft tissue release with Maitland Mobilization, it highlights how these methods, when used together, can achieve better results in alleviating pain and reducing disability compared to applying each technique individually. This approach targets both joint dysfunction and muscle tension, promoting faster recovery, enhancing quality of life, and lowering healthcare costs. Additionally, this research provides physiotherapists and manual therapists with a practical guide for implementing non-invasive and cost-effective treatment protocols, reducing dependence on pharmacological or surgical interventions. Moreover, this study will broaden the scope for future investigations into combined manual therapy interventions for other musculoskeletal conditions. Ultimately, this study benefits practitioners, patients, and healthcare systems by offering a targeted, interdisciplinary approach to managing CGH effectively.

Delimitation

The study will be delimited to:

  • Patients age will range from 20-40 years.
  • Fifity- seven patients (both genders) .
  • The International Classification of Headache Disorders-III criteria 2018 and CFRT as a base for selecting CGH.
  • The VAS for assessing headache intensity.
  • The CFRT for diagnosing CGH and evaluating patient progression.
  • The CROM device for assessing the upper cervical ROM and the neck general mobility in all directions.
  • The pressure algometer for measuring the PPT.

Basic Assumptions

It will be assumed that:

  • All patients will follow all the given instructions strictly during the study duration, regarding the assessment and the treatment procedure.
  • All participants will be evaluated under the same environmental conditions.

Hypotheses

  1. There will be no significant difference between using the three techniques (suboccipital myofascial release alone, Maitland mobilization alone, nor the combined protocol) on headache intensity in patients with CGH neither immediately nor after one week follow up.
  2. There will be no significant difference between using the three techniques on headache duration in patients with CGH neither immediately nor after one week follow up.
  3. There will be no significant difference between using the three techniques on headache frequency in patients with CGH neither immediately nor after one week follow up.
  4. There will be no significant difference between using the three techniques on CFRT in patients with CGH neither immediately nor after one week follow up.
  5. There will be no significant difference between using the three techniques on upper cervical ROM in patients with CGH neither immediately nor after one week follow up.
  6. There will be no significant difference between using the three techniques on general neck mobility in patients with CGH neither immediately nor after one week follow up.
  7. There will be no significant difference between using the three techniques on PPT of upper trapezius muscle in patients with CGH neither immediately nor after one week follow up.
  8. There will be no significant difference between using the three techniques on PPT of suboccipital muscle in patients with CGH neither immediately nor after one week follow up.

Definitions of Terms Cervicogenic headache (CGH): It is defined as secondary headache that is associated with cervical disorders and pain originate from upper cervical problem and refer to head and radiate into one or more area and exact mechanism is unknown .

Maitland mobilization: It is one of the popular physical therapy approaches in form of oscillation passive movement of the joint to reduce pain or decrease soft tissue stiffness to increase ROM.

Neck pain: It is a popular musculoskeletal disorder that causes pain in about 67% of people and occurs in upper thoracic spine that physiologically involves movement of neck and shoulder and exacerbate by bad posture.

Pressure pain threshold (PPT): is defined as the minimal amount of pressure where a sense of pressure first changes to pain.

It is defined as nuchal line inhibition technique at muscles surrounding base of the skull and C1 and C2 its technique to release facia by using gentle pressure and stretch for long duration

Enrollment

57 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 40 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria

Each patient will be included in our study if only he/she meets all of the following criteria:

  • Age between 20- 40 year.
  • No physiotherapy intervention at least for the last three months (Mohamed et al., 2019).
  • Neck pain elicited and disturbed by neck movement or maintained position pain produced by pressure over upper cervical (Dunning et al.,2021).
  • Limited neck motion with flexion and rotation test less than or equal 32 degree on both right and left side (Dunning et al.,2021).
  • Patients suffered from intermittent headaches of varying duration and pain level at least once every week through the last 3 months (Hall et al., 2010; Khalil., et al 2019).

The patient will be excluded if he /she meets one of the following criteria:

  • Physical therapy intervention during last three months (Mohamed et al., 2019).
  • Primary headaches such as migraine or tension type headache (Mohammadi et al.,2021).
  • Cervical radiculopathy, history of neck trauma and previous surgery at neck or shoulder, spondylosis (Mohammadi et al.,2021).
  • Vertebrobasilar insufficiency or vestibular dysfunctions (Mohamed et al., 2019).
  • Any degenerative vertebral lesion (Shabbir et al., 2021).
  • Concomitant medical diagnosis of any primary headache (tension type or migraine) (Shabbir et al., 2021).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

57 participants in 3 patient groups

Group A (Suboccipital Myofascial Release)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients in this group will receive suboccipital myofascial release therapy for one session.
Treatment:
Other: suboccipital myofacial release
Group B (Maitland Mobilization)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients in this group will receive Maitland mobilization therapy for one session.
Treatment:
Other: maitland mobilization
Group C (Combined Group)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients in this group will receive both techniques; suboccipital myofascial release therapy then Maitland mobilization for one session.
Treatment:
Other: combined myofacsial release with maitland mobilization

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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