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Tactile Acuity, Right-left Discrimination, and Motor Imagery in Chronic Rotator Cuff-related Shoulder Pain

A

Acibadem University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Shoulder Pain
Rotator Cuff Syndrome

Treatments

Other: Assessments

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06503549
2023/32-18

Details and patient eligibility

About

A common finding in various chronic musculoskeletal pain conditions is changes in the cortical sensorimotor region. Functional brain changes associated with chronic pain include changes in the working body schema and associated mechanisms. However, the number of studies on this subject is quite limited, especially in the shoulder joint. There is no study on rotator cuff-related shoulder pain. In the light of this information, the present study aims to compare tactile acuity, right-left reasoning ability and motor imagery ability in chronic rotator cuff-related shoulder pain with healthy controls. In addition, the relationship of these markers with pain level, pressure pain threshold, range of motion, functionality, pain-related fear and central synthesis level will be investigated as a secondary objective.

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 18-65 years
  • Participants were classified with chronic Chronic Rotator Cuff-related Shoulder Pain if duration was equal or greater than 6 months, as recommended by the International Association for the Study of Pain for research purposes
  • Pain at rest maximum 2 out of 10 on verbal numerical rating scale
  • Pain over the deltoid and/or upper arm region for more than 4 weeks, pain associated with arm movement, and familiar pain reproduced with loading or resisted testing during abduction or external rotation of the arm
  • Patient had to test positive at least 3 out of 5 symptoms-provoking tests: pain during Neer test, Hawkins-Kennedy test, Jobe test, painful arc between 60° and 120°, pain or weakness during external rotation resistance test

Exclusion criteria

  • Bilateral shoulder pain
  • Corticosteroid injections less than 6 weeks prior to the enrolment
  • Participants who were pregnant, Mini Mental State Examination score >24
  • Clinical signs of full-thickness rotator cuff tears (positive external and internal rotation lag tests or drop arm test)
  • Evidence of adhesive capsulitis (50% or more than 30° loss of passive external rotation)
  • Previous cervical, thoracic or shoulder surgery; recent fractures or dislocations on the painful shoulder
  • Symptoms of cervical radiculopathy as primary complaint (tingling, radiating pain in the arm associated with neck complaints)
  • Primary diagnosis of acromioclavicular pathology, shoulder instability
  • Previous medical imaging confirming full-thickness rotator cuff tears or calcifications larger than 5mm
  • Patients with competing pathologies (inflammatory arthritis, neurological disorders, fibromyalgia, malignancy)
  • History of cancer, neurologic, systemic, rheumatic or vascular disorder and use of psychiatric medication
  • Participants performing overhead sport activities for more than 4hours/week

Trial design

90 participants in 2 patient groups

Healthy control
Treatment:
Other: Assessments
Patient with rotator cuff-related shoulder pain
Treatment:
Other: Assessments

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Nuray ALACA, Assoc. Prof

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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