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The Comparsion of MCkenzie and Mulligan Exercise in Patients With Non-Specific Neck Pain

I

Istinye University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Neck Pain

Treatments

Behavioral: Mckenzie Exercises
Behavioral: Mulligan Exercise

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05496699
IstinyeFTR

Details and patient eligibility

About

Non-specific neck pain (NSBA) is defined as pain in the posterior and lateral parts of the neck in the absence of neurological and specific pathologies (fracture, infection, inflammation, etc.) between the superior nuchael line and the 1st thoracic vertebra. The lifetime neck pain rate is approximately 12-70%; Neck pain is the reason for admission in approximately 25% of applications to outpatient clinics of the Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinic. Neck pain is the most common spinal problem after low back pain, and it is defined as nonspecific neck pain due to its multifactorial etiology. Many conservative treatment methods are used in the treatment of NSBA. These include medical treatments, exercise, massage, acupuncture, neural therapy and physical therapy modalities. The basis of Mulligan's theory is based on a positional error that develops secondarily, causing misplacement of the joint. With the Mulligan mobilization technique, the joint is displaced to normal and positional error is corrected. Restoration of motion is aimed by repositioning the bone. The main indication in this technique is increased pain, stiffness and weakness in movement. The Mulligan mobilization technique is performed by asking for active movement while maintaining a manually applied joint shift. Painless movement is aimed at the joint. According to the general principles of Mulligan treatment, all techniques are applied in a way that does not cause pain and creates an effect that will eliminate the pain in a short time after the application.

Full description

The McKenzie approach is an evaluative and therapeutic strategy in the practice of musculoskeletal physiotherapy to manage pain and restore the function of the cervical spine. This approach aims to control cervical disability when used in the early stages such as postural correction and increasing flexibility of adjacent musculotendinous structures. It aims to classify mechanically induced spinal pain into postural, dysfunctional and dysregulation syndromes to centralize and reduce spinal pain. Cervical self-treatment techniques used by McKenzie specialists have been shown to be effective for nonspecific neck pain. The purpose of evaluating patients with cervical-related disorders is to select self-management techniques as directional preference movements that should be repeated to reduce pain and symptoms. When we look at the studies in the literature; It has been reported that Mulligan concept techniques improve pain and disability symptoms in patients with chronic mechanical neck pain at the short- and medium-term effect level. In a study comparing Mulligan and McKenzie practices previously, it was concluded that Mulligan exercise was more effective in improving cervical range of motion than McKenzie exercise in adults with reduced cervical lordosis. In another comparative article, according to the results of the study comparing the two exercise techniques, it was seen that cervical ROM increased in both exercise groups.

However, it was concluded that the Mulligan exercise group showed better results than the Mckenzie group in the early period. Different types of mobilization are used to treat neck pain, but limited studies have been conducted to compare the effectiveness of two different mobilization techniques in the treatment of neck pain.

The aim of the study was that two different exercise programs (mckenzi-mulligan) were used in individuals with non-specific neck pain; to compare their effects on pain, range of motion (ROM) and functional outcomes. It is aimed to compare the effect of Mulligan exercises and Mckenzie exercises on pain reduction, joint range of motion, recovery speed, muscle activation and functional treatment in individuals with non-specific neck pain due to non-specific neck pain due to multifactorial etiology. Considering that there should be a larger number of studies on this subject with the literature review, it is aimed to contribute this study to the literature.

Enrollment

30 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Individuals with neck pain of unknown origin for more than 3 months
  • Individuals between the ages of 18-45
  • Non-smokers
  • Individuals who have the ability to understand and apply Turkish written and verbal instructions

Exclusion criteria

  • Individuals with a history of neck injury, micro or macro trauma,
  • Individuals with tumors in and around the spinal cord,
  • Individuals who have undergone surgery from the neck and shoulder region,
  • Individuals with positive Vertebrobacillary Artery Test,
  • Female individuals who are pregnant, individuals receiving hormone therapy,
  • Individuals with neurological disease,
  • Individuals with neuropathic pain due to neurological and systemic disorders,
  • Patients with any loss of function in the upper extremities due to musculoskeletal disease

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

30 participants in 2 patient groups

mckenzie group
Experimental group
Description:
Mckenzie exercise protocol will be applied to the participants in this group. It will be applied to the participants for 4 weeks and 5 days a week for 30 minutes. The exercise program will be performed by the patient under the supervision of a physiotherapist.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mckenzie Exercises
mullgian group
Experimental group
Description:
Mulligan exercise protocol will be applied to the participants in this group. It will be applied to the participants for 4 weeks and 5 days a week for 30 minutes. The exercise program will be performed by the patient under the supervision of a physiotherapist.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mulligan Exercise

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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