Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
32 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2022-02-15
2022-12-31
Brief Summary
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Emerging evidence indicates that an associative clinical response associated with an early within session (during the first visit) and between session (from the first to the second visit) during a posterior to anterior mobilization, identifies individuals who have a favorable prognosis with spinal pain. While neurophysiological basis for the analgesic effect of manual therapy has been proposed to date no one has investigated if the associative clinical response is purely another way of identifying pain adaptive or non-pain adaptive individuals. If a within-session or between-session response is associated with the pain adaptive mechanism found during an ice-bath immersion, clinicians could adopt the clinical evaluation technique and improve their ability to identify proper patients for management. The investigators will evaluate the relationship between the pain adaptive mechanistic response from ice-bath immersion and the associative clinical response that occurs during a PA mobilization of the spine.
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Detailed Description
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Data collection will be completed by investigators and/or clinicians whom have been trained directly by investigators on the research protocol or by the research team.
Following consent, the individuals will follow the protocol below:
1. Baseline patient reported measurements will be obtained including McGill Pain Questionnaire, Fear Avoidance Belief Questionnaire, Modified Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability Questionnaire, Expectations of Treatment Scale, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Fatigue Severity Scale, Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS) (current, best, and worst)
2. Baseline Demographics which have shown prognostic value
1. Age
2. Gender
3. Symptom Duration
4. Joint(s) involved
5. Presence of referred leg pain
3. Baseline Objective measures will be obtained including:
1. Active Range of Motion at lumbar spine and Coxofemoral joint
2. Neuromuscular Screening (Reflexes, light touch sensation L3-S1, neural testing)
3. Cardiopulmonary screening (Blood pressure, heart rate, pulse-oximetry, AAA)
4. Joint mobility at lumbosacral spine via Posterior -\> Anterior (PA) mobilizations performed central and unilateral; Assess for comparable sign, If present progress to below
5. Pain modulation/adaptability assessment - Protocol outlined below:
6. Application of non-thrust Central or Unilateral PA mobilization application as chosen by the clinician in a pragmatic manner to address patients comparable sign.
* Technique, grade, time, and location to be recorded
* Pain (NPRS) to be graded continuously throughout the technique and recorded
Pain Adaptability/Modulation assessment:
Throughout the experiment, the participants will sit comfortably in a chair with arms rested on the arm rests and legs testing on the floor. The room temperature will be controlled at 21-23 deg C. Participants will be assured that cold stimulation will not cause any physical damage to their body, and are allowed to withdraw from the experiments at any time.
Cold pressor pain
* A bucket of ice and water, a temperature of 1.0C to 4.0C will be maintained by stirring regularly to prevent an increase of water temperature surrounding the hand.
* Participants will submerge their left hand to 5cm above the wrist with their palm facing down. They will be encouraged to keep their hand in the water for 5 minutes. If they find the pain becoming intolerable, they can withdraw their hand immediately.
* Pain intensity - During the cold stimulation, participants will be asked to rate the intensity of pain continuously using a 0 to 10 NPRS (0 = no pain at all; 10 = worst pain possible).
* McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ) - will be completed after cold stimulation. The MPQ is designed to provide qualitative and quantitative measures of pain that can be examined statistically. The MPQ consists of 4 major classes of word descriptors (sensory, affective, evaluative, and miscellaneous) for participants to specify subjective pain experience.
* Pressure pain threshold (PPT) - An electronic pressure algometer (Pain Test FPX 25) with a probe area of 1 cm squared will be used. Participants will indicate when the pressure stimulus becomes just painful. PPT's will be determined by averaging 3 assessments taken at 1-minute intervals. It will take 2 to 3 minutes to complete the PPT tests, which will lead to some participants undertaking a 6-minute cold stimulation test.
* Sensory assessment - All PPT assessments will be tested at 3 sites: bilateral extensor carpi radialis, at 3 cm distal to the lateral end of the cubic crease on the elbow, and on the right soleus at 8 cm proximal to medial malleolus.
* All PPT Assessments will be performed before, during (3 minutes after the initiation of cold stimulation), and 20 minutes post termination of Cold Stimulation.
4. 2-week follow up via phone call, text message, email, or virtual meeting to assess NPRS and GROC.
Conditions
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Study Design
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OTHER
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Low Back Pain
Pragmatic Mobilization The pragmatically applied non-thrust manipulation will be based on the original concepts outlined by Maitland and will of consist of passive, low velocity, oscillatory movements within the physiological range of the joint, applied to the comparable spinal level of the patient (defined as the spinal level that reproduced the patient's familiar pain). The techniques will be modified based on clinician assessment and patient feedback and consist of Grade I through Grade IV movements. Since the pragmatic approach is clinician-driven, no time limit will be placed on the application and the number of mobilizations used will depend on the patient feedback (the exact definition of a pragmatic treatment)
Pragmatic Mobilization
The techniques will of consist of passive, low velocity, oscillatory movements within the physiological range of the joint, applied to the comparable spinal level of the patient (defined as the spinal level that reproduced the patient's familiar pain). The techniques will be modified based on clinician assessment and patient feedback and consist of Grade I through Grade IV movements. Common techniques used may include unilateral posterior-anterior movements, central posterior-anterior movements, and sidelying rotations (without thrust). Since the pragmatic approach is clinician-driven, no time limit will be placed on the application and the number of mobilizations used will depend on the patient feedback (the exact definition of a pragmatic treatment). Patients will be seen for 4 visits.
Other Name: Non-thrust manipulation (pragmatically applied)
Interventions
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Pragmatic Mobilization
The techniques will of consist of passive, low velocity, oscillatory movements within the physiological range of the joint, applied to the comparable spinal level of the patient (defined as the spinal level that reproduced the patient's familiar pain). The techniques will be modified based on clinician assessment and patient feedback and consist of Grade I through Grade IV movements. Common techniques used may include unilateral posterior-anterior movements, central posterior-anterior movements, and sidelying rotations (without thrust). Since the pragmatic approach is clinician-driven, no time limit will be placed on the application and the number of mobilizations used will depend on the patient feedback (the exact definition of a pragmatic treatment). Patients will be seen for 4 visits.
Other Name: Non-thrust manipulation (pragmatically applied)
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Ability to reproduce low back discomfort with PA mobilization
Exclusion Criteria
* Diagnosis which contradicts the application of prolonged cold including but not limited to severe vascular disease, open wounds/sores on involved extremity.
* Diagnosis which contradicts the application of joint mobilizations including but not limited to instability, inflammatory conditions, severe osteoporosis.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Youngstown State University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Damian Keter
Principial Investigator, PhD Candidate
Principal Investigators
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Kenneth Learman, PhD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
Professor, Department of Graduate Studies in Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, Ohio
Severine Van Slambrouck, PhD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
IRB Director, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, Ohio
Damian L Keter
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Student, Youngstown State University
Locations
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The Therapy Institute
Haslett, Michigan, United States
Old Bridge Spine and Wellness
Old Bridge, New Jersey, United States
Tri County Physical Therapy Institute
Canfield, Ohio, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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290
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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