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Study Evaluating the Effectiveness of Shiatsu on Fatigue in Patients With Axial Spondyloarthritis (SFASPA)

C

Centre Hospitalier Régional d'Orléans

Status

Completed

Conditions

Spondyloarthritis

Treatments

Procedure: SHIATSU
Procedure: DUMMY SHIATSU

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05433168
CHRO-2021-14

Details and patient eligibility

About

Spondyloarthritis is a potentially serious disease with reduced life expectancy. Even if the clinical presentation is eminently variable from one patient to another, the most frequently encountered manifestations such as inflammatory spinal pain, peripheral arthritis or even extra-articular involvement of the disease all represent disabling symptoms, origin of pain, temporary or in some cases permanent functional incapacity, but also general repercussions on daily life (asthenia, reactive depressive syndrome, etc.) which require a multidisciplinary approach, involving several medical, paramedical and other stakeholders, The objective of treatment is to improve quality of life, to control symptoms and inflammation, to prevent structural damage, particularly in peripheral damage, to preserve or restore functional capacities, autonomy and social participation of patients with spondyloarthritis.

In France, the main professional reference for shiatsu is the Syndicat des Professionnels de Shiatsu, which proposes the following definition to define shiatsu:

Shiatsu (finger pressure in Japanese) is an energetic manual discipline addressing the individual as a whole. Shiatsu is part of personal assistance. He receives himself, dressed in soft clothes. Shiatsu is a discipline of well-being and prevention for better health. Its objective is to correct both the energy flow (ki, blood, lymph, etc.) and the body structure (muscles, tendons, etc.) by applying rhythmic pressure to the whole body, most often with the inches. It is for everyone and at all ages. Its principle of action is to restore the free flow of Ki (qi, Energy) in the body.

Shiatsu is a set of pressures performed mainly with the thumbs and the palms of the hands on different areas of the body, often taking up the points of the acupuncture meridians. Shiatsu pressures can be (Ishizuka 1993; Kagotani 1984; Okamoto 2016):

  • mobile in a given place and lasting 3 to 5 seconds: a phase of increasing pressure followed by a short holding time then release,
  • static: same phases but with a hold time of up to approximately 1 minute or even longer.

To date, there is no treatment specifically targeting fatigue in axSpA. Indeed, the underlying mechanisms of fatigue in SpA remain poorly understood, and could for example involve pro-inflammatory cytokines and the inflammatory process, and/or psychological distress. The effectiveness of non-pharmacological interventions and in particular the care provided by shiatsu practitioners have not been the subject of studies evaluating, according to the criteria of evidence-based medicine, the benefit of this practice, particularly in the context of treatment of spondyloarthritis.

Full description

To investigate the variations in the fatigue score (FACIF-F) after a shiatsu intervention (3 sessions) versus a sham shiatsu intervention (3 sessions) (control group).

The primary endpoint will be the percentage of patients responding to the FACIT Fatigue score. A response to fatigue will be defined as an improvement, i.e. an increase of ≥ 4 points in the FACIT-F score corresponding to the minimum clinically important difference.

Monocentric randomized controlled cross-over trial with allocation of patients according to a ratio (1:1) The study will be offered prospectively and systematically to patients with spondyloarthritis meeting the inclusion criteria during a follow-up consultation or in a day hospital or traditional hospitalization in the rheumatology department.

Enrollment

72 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • The patients with spondyloarthritis meeting the ASAS criteria and followed in the rheumatology department of the Orléans Regional Hospital Center.
  • Men and women aged 18 to 70
  • Patients with digital or visual analog rating scale ≥ 3 on the 1st question of the BASDAI

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient with a pathology that contraindicates the practice of shiatsu (evolving infectious skin pathology that would make shiatsu treatment difficult)
  • Previous shiatsu treatment
  • Inability to attend appointments for the duration of the study
  • Pregnant or breastfeeding woman
  • Refusal to participate in the study or to sign the consent
  • Patients not affiliated or not beneficiaries of a social security scheme
  • Person under guardianship or curatorship
  • Patient with an uncontrolled epileptic or psychotic condition which, in the opinion of the investigator, would interfere with the smooth running of the study

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

72 participants in 2 patient groups

SHIATSU GROUP
Experimental group
Description:
The patients will benefit from shiatsu treatments by a professional according to the shiatsu protocol developed by the Syndicate's evaluation commission Shiatsu Professionals (SPS).
Treatment:
Procedure: DUMMY SHIATSU
Procedure: SHIATSU
DUMMY SHIATSU GROUP
Experimental group
Description:
Exercising a fake shiatsu is a real problem as opinions differ. The consensus of the different schools and styles of the technique is that shiatsu pressure is weight transfer. We are therefore going to remove this aspect from the SFASPA shiatsu protocol. The professional will run the same sequence of points, without any weight transfer, being only in contact with the receiver.
Treatment:
Procedure: DUMMY SHIATSU
Procedure: SHIATSU

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Nathalie BERNARDINELLI

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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