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The Effect of Manual Treatment on Respiratory Parameters, Pain, Posture and Quality of Life in Chronic Neck Pain

H

Hacettepe University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Neck Pain

Treatments

Other: exercises
Other: thoracic
Other: cervical

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03447977
KA-17109

Details and patient eligibility

About

Neck pain which is common musculoskeletal system problem in all populations, negatively affects functional status and quality of life. Muscle spasms, postural problems in cervical and thoracic regions and impairment on respiratory parameters (respiratory functions and respiratory muscle strength) is seen with neck pain. Manual therapy and exercise are widely preferred in the treatment of neck pain for improve pain, posture, muscle strength, range of motion, functional status and quality of life.

There are some studies showing that manual therapy improves respiratory parameters in pulmonary diseases but studies are lacking for neck pain. Our aim is to indicate that effects of manual therapy, manual therapy for different regions (cervical and/or thoracal region) and exercises for pain, posture, quality of life and also respiratory parameters in patients with chronic neck pain.

Full description

Manual therapy and exercises are evidence-based methods for improving pain, muscle strength, range of motion, function and quality of life in individuals with neck pain. These physiotherapy approaches have been shown to improve respiratory functions in patients with neck pain and also in pulmonary diseases such as cystic fibrosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases.

Studies show that to improve respiratory parameters in patients for chronic neck pain, mobilization of thoracic region and exercises for endurance of deep neck muscles are beneficial. Despite the proposal given in this study, there are few studies evaluating the relationship between respiratory functions and the strength of respiratory muscles in patients with neck pain in detail, and also the effectiveness of different physiotherapy-rehabilitation methods on respiratory functions on neck pain. In a single study on this subject, thoracic region manual therapy, stretching exercise program and both of these applications were applied for the subjects. At the end of the treatment, respiratory functions developed in all three groups; but both applications group have been shown to more effective than thoracic manual therapy group for increasing respiratory functions.Exercises and manual therapy for cervical and/or thoracic region frequently used for chronic neck pain but there are no studies that compare manual therapy for different region on respiratory parameters. Therefore, our aim is to determine the effects of exercises with manual therapy methods for cervical and/or thoracic region in chronic neck pain patients on pain, posture, quality of life, as well as on respiratory parameters.

Enrollment

46 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Individuals who have pain for at least 3 month with mechanical neck pain
  • Individuals voluntarily participating to the study

Exclusion criteria

  • Individuals who have undergone cervical, spinal, thoracic, or abdominal region surgeries or pathology; whiplash injury; neurological deficit; osteoporosis; rheumatological disease; pulmonary disease; pharmacological treatment; or malignancy; or have a body mass index (BMI) >40 or were smokers

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

46 participants in 3 patient groups

cervical group
Experimental group
Description:
cervical spinal mobilizations, exercises, 2 session for 6 weeks
Treatment:
Other: cervical
Other: exercises
thoracic group
Experimental group
Description:
cervical and thoracic spinal mobilizations, exercises, 2 session for 6 weeks
Treatment:
Other: cervical
Other: exercises
Other: thoracic
exercise group
Experimental group
Description:
exercises, 2 session for 6 weeks
Treatment:
Other: exercises

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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