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Manual Therapy to the Cervical Spine and Diaphragm Combined With Breathing Reeducation Exercises, in nsCNP Patients

U

University of West Attica

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Neck Pain

Treatments

Other: Conventional Physiotherapy Program
Other: Cervical plus Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy plus Breathing Reeducation Exercises
Other: Cervical Manual Therapy plus sham Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05229393
UWestAttica300921

Details and patient eligibility

About

Chronic neck pain (CNP) is reported to be one of the most common musculoskeletal pain syndromes. Studies showed that patients with chronic neck pain compensated with changes in Pain, Function, Musculoskeletal and Respiratory outcomes. The diaphragm is a primary respiratory muscle contributing to postural stability and spinal control. Many studies showed that manual therapy and exercise improve clinical and respiratory outcomes in CNP patients. Few studies highlight the importance of diaphragm manual therapy and Reeducation Breathing Exercises in musculoskeletal diseases and in CNP patients. However, the exact mechanism is still unclear. This study aims to examine the hypothesis that: "Diaphragm Manual Therapy and Breathing Reeducation Exercises combined with cervical manual therapy - improve clinical and respiratory outcomes more than cervical manual therapy intervention only or conventional physiotherapy

Full description

Chronic neck pain (CNP) may affect the physical, social, and psychological aspects of the individual, contributing to the increase in costs in society and business. Neck pain is a major cause of morbidity and disability in everyday life and at the workplace, in many different countries and populations, but its basic pathology and pathophysiology are still unclear.

CNP patients present respiratory dysfunction and pain presence is accompanied by a varying amount of decrements in several clinical outcomes affecting the neuromusculoskeletal system like disability, range of motion restriction, and decreased proprioception as well as neuromuscular control. However, the quality of life and psychology of patients with CNP are affected in parallel. The diaphragm is the most important respiratory muscle also contributing to postural stability and spinal control. Several studies have shown that diaphragm manual therapy and breathing retraining exercises can improve respiratory, as well as pain, function, and musculoskeletal outcomes in chronic low back pain. However, the effectiveness in patients with chronic neck pain has not been definitively determined in relation to other physical therapy interventions. The primary purpose of the present study is to determine further the effectiveness of Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy and Breathing Reeducation Exercises in CNP patients. The secondary purpose is to investigate the relationship between CNP, breathing dysfunction, pain, disability, and musculoskeletal clinical outcomes.

The present study is expected to recruit 90 patients with CNP. Patients with CNP will be randomly assigned to (1) Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy plus Cervical Manual Therapy plus Breathing Reeducation Exercises (2) Cervical Manual Therapy plus sham Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy and (3) Conventional Physiotherapy. Each participant will receive a particular intervention program depending on their group allocation. All participants will receive two evaluation sessions before and after the intervention.

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

All

Ages

25 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Individuals who have pain for at least 3 months with non-specific mechanical neck pain
  • Individuals voluntarily participating in the study
  • Patients will also be selected on the basis of demonstrating DB in at least one of a series of tests conducted to assess the extent of their Dysfunctional Breathing (biomechanical, biochemical, psychological)

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnancy

    • Contraindications for manual therapy or inability to complete the treatment
    • Patients who received physiotherapy or osteopathic treatment during the last 3 months
    • Individuals with bronchial asthma, chronic bronchitis, emphysema, bronchiectasis and malignancy
    • Medical diagnosis of rheumatologic disease
    • Medical diagnosis of respiratory disease (COPD, asthma)
    • Spine surgery (cervical, spinal, thoracic or abdominal region)
    • Medical diagnosis of cancer (past or present)
    • Whiplash injuries
    • Previous cervical fracture
    • Cervical anatomical changes
    • Thrombotic events, Anaemia or Diabetes
    • Body temperature greater than 37 degrees in the previous 48 hours
    • Obesity (BMI greater than 40)
    • Scoliosis or other diseases that cause spine and chest deformity
    • Positive cervical region instability and positive vertebral artery test
    • Individuals with neurological deficits or with motor loss
    • Individuals who have whiplash injuries, osteoporosis, or rheumatoid disease (such as rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjögren's syndrome)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

90 participants in 3 patient groups

Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy Group A
Experimental group
Description:
Experimental: Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy plus Cervical Manual Therapy plus Breathing Reeducation Exercises group. Cervical manual therapy will be the same as for the Manual Control Group (20 minutes). Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy (10 minutes) and Breathing Reeducation Exercises (10 minutes). The program will be carried out three times per week lasting four weeks in total. Each session will last about 40 minutes.
Treatment:
Other: Cervical plus Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy plus Breathing Reeducation Exercises
Cervical Manual Therapy Group B
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Sham Comparator: Sham Treatment group or Manual Control Group Patients included in this group will receive Cervical Manual Therapy (25 minutes) plus sham Diaphragmatic Manual techniques (15 minutes). The program will be carried out three times per week lasting four weeks in total. Each session will last about 40 minutes.
Treatment:
Other: Cervical Manual Therapy plus sham Diaphragmatic Manual Therapy
Conventional Physiotherapy Program Group C
Active Comparator group
Description:
Active Comparator: Conventional Treatment group Patients included in this group will receive a conventional physiotherapy program with Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation-TENS (15 minutes) plus Microwave pulsed Diathermy (10 minutes), and soft tissue techniques (15 minutes). The program will be carried out three sessions per week during the four weeks. Each session will last about 40 minutes.
Treatment:
Other: Conventional Physiotherapy Program

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

University of West Attica; PETROS TATSIOS, MSc, MSc, PhD cand

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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