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Physiotherapy in Chronic Neck Pain

U

Uşak University

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

Neck Pain

Treatments

Other: Trigger point therapy and home exercises
Other: Standard physiotherapy intervention and home exercises
Other: Kinesiology Taping therapy and home exercises
Other: Cervical - Scapular Mobilization and home exercises

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06957639
585-585-07

Details and patient eligibility

About

In this randomized controlled experimental study design, it was aimed to examine whether different treatment approaches frequently applied in physical therapy clinics have an effect on pain, hand grip strength and hand skills by applying them to individuals with CNNP. For this purpose, the following hypotheses were created.

H1: Standard physiotherapy intervention and home exercises have an effect on reducing the pain intensity of individuals with CNNP H2: Standard physiotherapy intervention and home exercises have an effect on increasing the hand grip strength of individuals with CNNP.

H3: Standard physiotherapy intervention and home exercises have an effect on increasing the hand skills of individuals with CNNP.

H4: Trigger point therapy and home exercises have an effect on reducing the pain intensity of individuals with CNNP.

H5: Trigger point therapy and home exercises have an effect on increasing the hand grip strength of individuals with CNNP.

H6: Trigger point therapy and home exercises have an effect on increasing the hand skills of individuals with CNNP.

H7: Kinesiology Taping treatment and home exercises have an effect on reducing the pain intensity of individuals with CNNP.

H8: Kinesiology Taping treatment and home exercises have an effect on increasing the hand grip strength of individuals with CNNP.

H9: Kinesiology Taping treatment and home exercises have an effect on increasing the manual skills of individuals with CNNP.

H10: Cervical - Scapular Mobilization and home exercises have an effect on reducing the pain intensity of individuals with CNNP.

H11: Cervical - Scapular Mobilization and home exercises have an effect on increasing the hand grip strength of individuals with CNNP.

H12: Cervical - Scapular Mobilization and home exercises have an effect on increasing the manual skills of individuals with CNNP.

4 different groups will be created in this study. These are Group 1: Standard physiotherapy intervention and home exercises Group 2: Trigger point therapy and home exercises Group 3: Kinesiology Taping therapy and home exercises Group 4: Cervical - Scapular Mobilization and home exercises

Full description

Neck pain is one of the musculoskeletal disorders with a high prevalence in the adult population. Its prevalence in the world varies between 16.7% and 75.1% and is generally more common in women than in men. Neck pain is a public health problem that should be considered in terms of individual health and general well-being as well as health expenditures. As a result of ignoring neck pain, neck pain becomes chronic. Neck pain, which significantly affects the quality of life of individuals with chronic neck pain (CNP), causes restrictions in movement and decreases in upper extremity functions. In particular, the functions of the hand, which are indicators of upper extremity functions frequently used in daily life activities, are the functions of the hand. Studies have found that individuals with chronic neck pain have decreased grip strength and psychomotor skills compared to healthy individuals. Based on this, various treatment methods have been applied to individuals with CNP in many similar studies in the literature to reduce the level of pain, prevent disability, increase performance in daily life activities and increase joint range of motion. There is no study that examines whether the various physical therapy methods frequently applied in this clinic have an effect on the grip strength and manual dexterity of individuals with CNNP by applying them together comparatively. In this context, four different groups will be formed for the research. The first group will receive standard physiotherapy intervention, the second group will receive trigger point therapy for the neck region, the third group will receive kinesiology taping, and the fourth group will receive cervical and scapular mobilization treatment methods. Individuals in all four groups will be advised to do daily home exercise programs and told to apply them. The applications will be applied four times a week for four weeks, for a total of 16 sessions. Then, before and after the application, neck pain levels of individuals with CNNP, fine hand skills evaluation, and grip strength measurements will be made. Thus, it will be found out whether these different treatment approaches will reduce the pain intensity of individuals with CNNP, whether grip strength, which is an important indicator of upper extremity performance, is increased, and whether fine hand skills will be improved. The purpose of this study; It will be determined whether different physiotherapy approaches applied to individuals with chronic nonspecific neck pain have an effect on the individuals' pain level, grip strength and manual skills. The results will reveal how different physiotherapy interventions can play a role in pain management and improving upper extremity performance in individuals with CNNP. Similar studies conducted today will be examined with the results we obtain and various solution suggestions will be presented.

Enrollment

80 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 64 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Being 18-64 years old,
  • Having neck pain for 3 months or more,
  • being literate, being a volunteer

Exclusion criteria

  • having musculoskeletal injuries in the neck-shoulder area,
  • having neurological or orthopedic problems,
  • having cancer, having musculoskeletal malformations,
  • having had head and neck surgery,
  • having received physical therapy due to neck pain in the last 6 months
  • not accepting to participate in the study,
  • being pregnant,
  • individuals with hearing and visual impairments

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

80 participants in 4 patient groups

Group 1
Other group
Description:
Group 1: Standard physiotherapy intervention and home exercises
Treatment:
Other: Standard physiotherapy intervention and home exercises
Group 2
Experimental group
Description:
Group 2: Trigger point therapy and home exercises
Treatment:
Other: Trigger point therapy and home exercises
Group 3
Experimental group
Description:
Group 3: Kinesiology Taping therapy and home exercises
Treatment:
Other: Kinesiology Taping therapy and home exercises
Group 4
Experimental group
Description:
Group 4: Cervical - Scapular Mobilization and home exercises:
Treatment:
Other: Cervical - Scapular Mobilization and home exercises

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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