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Chronic cervical pain is a common problem in rehabilitation clinic, but the treatment is time consuming and the effect unsatisfactory. Noxipoint® Therapy, developed by Dr. Charles C. Koo, is a unique electrical stimulation precisely on corresponding "Noxipoints®" of each injured soft tissue, with specific duration and intensity of TENS that induce C-fiber nerve ending sensation. Each application typically last for 2 to 5 minutes. Based on observations of the clinical application, Noxipoint® Therapy appears to relieve chronic neck and shoulder pain significantly with lasting effect, and effectively improves the range of motion. However, large-scale double-blinded, randomized control study on the therapy is not available yet.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effect of Noxipoint® Therapy and physical therapy (including the current TENS application) on patients with chronic neck pain. This study is a prospective stratified randomized control trial. Eighty subjects with chronic cervical pain will be recruited from the Rehabilitation Department or the Physical Therapy Center of National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH). The qualified subjects will be stratified and randomly allocated into two arms, 40 persons in each:
Subjects will be evaluated before and after the first treatment session and followed up at about 4 weeks, 8 weeks, and 12 weeks after the first treatment.
Outcome measures are (1) the pain scale in the Brief Pain Index, (2) cervical Range of Motion (ROM), (3) Quality of Life (QoL) measured with the Interference of Pain to Life section in the Brief Pain Index (BPI) and (4) ultrasound elastogram. Pain scale, ROM and QoL measures will be taken before and after the first treatment session, and at 4 weeks, 8 weeks and 12 weeks after the first session. Elastogram will be taken before the first treatment, and about four weeks after the first treatment.
Statistics: The effects of PT and NT will be compared based on two-sample hypothesis testing methods. All the estimated P-values are two tailed.
Full description
Purpose To compare the effect of Noxipoint™ Therapy and physical therapy on subjects with chronic neck pain.
Background There are many interventions for managing the chronic neck pain. The approaches include physical therapy, medication and local corticoid injection, of which physical therapy (PT) is the most prevalent treatment. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) is one of the regular treatments of PT and usually used in chronic neck pain as an adjunct therapy. However, the application of TENS, including the location, duration and intensity of stimulation, is only loosely defined and largely decided by physical therapists and thus vary substantially from one application to another.
In spite of the long history of TENS uses, the results of existing studies, including randomized controlled trials (RCTs), have been inconclusive, with some showing benefits of TENS, and others showing none. Moreover, the studies that cite some positive effect of TENS over placebo also found that the effect does not last in the long run. The only conclusion that could be drawn is that TENS sometimes relieves pain in the short term.
Noxipoint™ Therapy, a particular combination of precise location, intensity and duration of electrical stimulation, invented by Charles Koo, the Co-PI of this protocol, may relieve general muscular-skeletal pain and recover the muscle function permanently. Based on observations of clinical application of Noxipoint Therapy on the neck and the shoulder pain, Noxipoint Therapy showed rapid relief and lasting effect several months after the treatment. However, a large-scale randomized control study is not available yet.
The key point of Noxipoint Therapy is that the location of stimulation is the determining factor of the efficacy of the pain treatment. In addition, the intensity, wave pattern and duration of stimulation also play important roles. The patient's compliance with the instruction to avoid stressing the newly recovered muscle/tissue during the "rest period" is also mandatory.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effect of Noxipoint Therapy and physical therapy on patients with chronic neck pain.
Study design
Subject enrollment
3.80 subjects will be recruited from the Rehabilitation Department or the Physical Therapy Department of National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH). After initial evaluation, qualified subjects will be stratified and randomized into the following two arms, about 40 subjects in either arm:
Methods
Intervention:
Physical therapy arm (PT):
Noxipoint Therapy arm (NT): Patients will be treated with electrical stimulation following Noxipoint Therapy guidelines as highlighted below:
Subjects in either group will be treated for up to 6 sessions within 3 weeks, about 1.5 hours per session. The treatment will terminate after six sessions or earlier if the patient shows no symptoms. No additional treatments will be provided after 6 sessions.
Evaluation: Pain scale, ROM and QoL will be measured before and after the first treatment and at about 4 weeks and 8 weeks after the first treatment. Pain scale and QoL may be measured before each session, and at 12 weeks (by phone) after the first treatment. Elastogram will be taken before the first treatment and 4 weeks after the first treatment. See attached Time Table at the end.
Statistics: The effects of PT and NT will be compared based on two-sample hypothesis testing methods. The significant level is set at 0.05. All the estimated P-values are two tailed. Missing data will be treated using Last Observation Carried Forward (LOCF) method.
Safety: Noxipoint Therapy is as safe as any other TENS application, since it is used within the general guidelines of TENS.
Patient Data Security Measure: The principle investigators will monitor the data safety with measures, such as keeping the study data separately from its medical data. The mapping table between the subject's identity and a randomly assigned identity will be maintained separately.
Compensation: Each subject will be compensated NT$400 for the time/transportation cost; half of which will be for the treatment and the other half for the follow-up. Dropout subjects will be paid pro rata.
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42 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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