Effectiveness of Cervical Traction and Neural Mobilization in Patients With Cervical Radiculopathy
NCT ID: NCT03015493
Last Updated: 2017-01-16
Study Results
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Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
50 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2016-05-31
2017-02-28
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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CR is caused by a disc herniation, or a space-occupying lesion that can result in CNR inflammation, impingement, or both. In normal situations, CNRs ensure the normal function of sensation, movement and motor coordination of the upper limb. Therefore, the development of CR can produce sensory and motor deficits in the involved limb, including pins and needles, numbness and muscle weakness, along with a neuropathic pain described as a burning or shooting pain. These symptoms lead patients to exhibit severe functional limitations such as difficulties to work, to sleep or to participate in hobbies. Studies on this topic identified several socioeconomic and psychological deficits, from lost work and wages to prolonged pain and impaired social functioning, leading patients with CR to express symptoms of anxiety and depression.
Treatment of CR has been the subject of debate between physiotherapists and researchers. Several non-operative treatment approaches have been advocated to reduce CR pain and their analgesic effect has been recognized in a number of randomized clinical trials with these in turn being analyzed in few systematic reviews. Based on these studies, patients with CR can benefit from a multimodal treatment approach including the application of postural education, cervical traction and manual therapy techniques (mobilization, thrust manipulation etc.) applied to the cervical spine. However the small number of these studies as well as their poor methodological quality due to the short-term follow ups, lack of patient's homogeneity, randomization or control group etc., raise several questions about the validity of research findings and therefore much more studies are necessary. Among manual therapy techniques that have been recommended to improve the patient's pain and functional limitations, neural mobilization (NM) has been advocated as an effective treatment option. NM introduced as an intervention for pain relief more than 25 years ago are techniques that involve a specific sequence of joint movements to mobilize the involved peripheral nerve in order to facilitate the reduced nerve gliding and reduced the increased neural mechanosensitivity.
The application of NM is common but since now little research attention has been given to support its usage in patients with CR. Recently, a case study and a randomized controlled study concluded that neural mobilization applied simultaneously with cervical traction can produce clinically meaningful improvements over a 4-week period, in terms of pain, disability, function, grip strength and cervical spine range of motion. However, both methodological designs did not allow determining whether NM provided these benefits. Thus, the purpose of the present study was to examine the effects of cervical traction with or without the addition of NM, in patients with CR.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Neural mobilization and traction
Patients in this group are treated with neural mobilization techniques combined with cervical traction
Neural mobilization combined with traction
Neural mobilization techniques combined with cervical traction for the cervical nerve roots
Traction group
Patients in this group are treated with cervical traction
Traction
Traction techniques for the cervical spine
Control group
Patients in this group comprise the control group and are not treated with any intervention
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Neural mobilization combined with traction
Neural mobilization techniques combined with cervical traction for the cervical nerve roots
Traction
Traction techniques for the cervical spine
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* A positive result in a minimum three of four tests (Spurling's test, Distraction test, Upper Limb Neurodynamic Test 1 and ipsilateral cervical rotation of less than 60) of a clinical prediction rule. This clinical prediction rule has demonstrated 94% specificity (95% = 0.88 to 1.00), 24% sensitivity (95% = 0.05 to 0.43) and a positive likelihood ratio of 6.1 (95% = 2.0 to 18.6) when 3 of 4 items were positive
Exclusion Criteria
* Bilateral CR or other musculoskeletal conditions in the affected limb.
* Receive of any prescription or over-the-counter analgesia or anti-inflammatory medication during the prior two weeks
22 Years
71 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Christos Savva
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Christos Savva
Lecturer
Principal Investigators
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Chritos Savva, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
European University Cyprus
References
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Young IA, Michener LA, Cleland JA, Aguilera AJ, Snyder AR. Manual therapy, exercise, and traction for patients with cervical radiculopathy: a randomized clinical trial. Phys Ther. 2009 Jul;89(7):632-42. doi: 10.2522/ptj.20080283. Epub 2009 May 21.
Other Identifiers
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CHR7
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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