ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Shock Wave Therapy Versus Mechanical Traction on Mechanical Low Back Pain

M

Merit University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Mechanical Low Back Pain

Treatments

Device: shock waves therapy

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05088031
Mechanical LBP

Details and patient eligibility

About

investigate the effect of shock wave therapy versus mechanical traction on mechanical low back pain.

Full description

Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is a common condition that causes tremendous health and socio-economic problems. CLBP is a widespread problem. About 70%-80% of adults in the general population are expected to suffer at least a low back pain episode at some time in their lives1. CLBP is the leading cause of absenteeism at work and creates restrictions on movements, lasting disabilities, and impaired quality of life. Non-specific low back pain is described as low back discomfort, which cannot be attributed to a distinct, known etiology "(e.g., infection, tumors, osteoporosis, fracture, structural deformity, inflammatory disorder, radicular syndrome, or cauda equina syndrome)" 2. Non-specific low back pain is a mechanical musculoskeletal pain that has a symptom that varies according to the physical activity nature 3.

The practice of sitting with a healthy posture and preventing a protracted-standing position can often prevent simple low back pain. However, many kinds of low back pain are addressed with therapies as numerous as the causes of low back pain. The most important treatments are therapeutic measures, such as bed rest, assistive aids, traction therapy, heat, electrical stimulation, and manual therapy are the first choice treatments4. If these methods fails, invasive therapy procedures like nerve roots blocks and epidural injections are employed, and operations are carried out when no reaction to other treatments has been seen or if the disease status is critical. New conservative therapies, including extracorporeal shock wave therapy (ESWT), have recently been embraced 5.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 35 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age between (20 and 35 years)
  • all subjects suffered from mechanical low back pain

Exclusion criteria

  • Rheumatoid arthritis or backbone pathologies, and past lumbar vertebrae surgery or cancer were reported

Trial design

60 participants in 3 patient groups

1- Group ( A): 20 patients underwent shock wave therapy
Description:
1-Group (A): 20 patients would undergo shock waves plus traditional physical therapy. One thousand shock waves (7 times per sec) were applied at 2.5 Hz at low energy flux densities of 0.01-0.16 mJ/mm2 using a 17 mm head for 15 minutes on alternate days for four weeks for a total of 12 sessions14.
Treatment:
Device: shock waves therapy
2-Group (B): 20 patients would undergo intermittent mechanical traction
Description:
2-Group (B): 20 patients would undergo intermittent mechanical traction plus conventional physical therapy. Participants would undergo 30 minutes of "mechanical traction (with 10-second pull and 5-second rest)" 3 times weekly day after day for four weeks for a total of 12 sessions.
Treatment:
Device: shock waves therapy
Group (C): (Control group) 20 patients would underwent conventional physical therapy
Description:
3-Group (C): (Control group) 20 patients would underwent conventional physical therapy consisted of "hyperthermia using hot packs (20 minutes), ultrasound (5 minutes), and electrotherapy using TENS (15 minutes) in addition to stretching exercises for the back, iliopsoas, and hamstring muscles and strengthening exercises for the abdominal muscles for 30 minutes".
Treatment:
Device: shock waves therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

Ahmed Abd El Rahim, PHD; Nadia abd el hakim, PHD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems