Comparison of Muscle Energy Technique and Oscillating Energy Manual Therapy in Chronic Lateral Epicondylitis

NCT ID: NCT05354167

Last Updated: 2022-09-16

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

34 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2022-04-01

Study Completion Date

2022-08-05

Brief Summary

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Lateral epicondylitis (LE) is a painful musculoskeletal condition caused by overuse. The condition is also called tennis elbow because it affects 50% of tennis players, notably beginners learning the one-handed backhand. Nonetheless, only 10% of all patients with LE play tennis. Lateral Epicondylitis (LE) or tennis elbow affects about 1-3% of general population.

Muscle energy technique was developed by osteopathic physician, Fred Mitchell, Sr. It was refined and systematized by Fred Mitchell, Jr., and has continued to evolve with contributions from many individuals.

Detailed Description

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Lateral epicondylitis (LE) is a painful musculoskeletal condition caused by overuse. The condition is also called tennis elbow because it affects 50% of tennis players, notably beginners learning the one-handed backhand. Nonetheless, only 10% of all patients with LE play tennis. Lateral Epicondylitis (LE) or tennis elbow affects about 1-3% of general population.

patients with Lateral Epicondylitis complains of pain, functional difficulty affecting activities of daily living related to wrist and forearm movements . The grip strength is affected due to voluntary decline of effort to avoid pain and due to wasting of affecting muscles seen in long standing conditions. The symptoms exacerbate with stressful activities in overuse syndromes but pain may persist even at rest as the condition progress.

Muscle energy technique was developed by osteopathic physician, Fred Mitchell, Sr. It was refined and systematized by Fred Mitchell, Jr., and has continued to evolve with contributions from many individuals. Muscle energy technique (MET) is used by practitioners from different professions and has been advocated for the treatment of shortened muscles, weakened muscles, restricted joints, and lymphatic drainage. In addition to using muscle effort to mobilize joints and tissues, MET is considered by some to be a biomechanics-based analytic diagnostic system that uses precise physical diagnosis evaluation procedures to identify and qualify articular range of motion restriction. MET are defined as a manual treatment in which a patient produces a contraction in a precisely controlled position and direction against a counterforce applied by a manual therapist. MET have been also used in asymptomatic subjects in order to increase mobility. There is varying evidence that when a joint has a functional limitation, the application of a MET can increase its Range of Motion.

A comparative study concluded that oscillating energy manual therapy and muscle energy technique had shown the improvement in Numeric Rating Scale, grip strength and PRTEE in lateral epicondylitis subjects, but more significant improvement was observed in the subjects who were treated with muscle energy technique than oscillating energy manual therapy.

Conditions

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Lateral Epicondylitis

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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muscle energy technique

the subject to sit comfortably and then stabilize the subject's distal humerus with one hand, then the forearm was supinated with the therapist another hand until resistance appeared. Holding the position the subject was asked to slowly pronate the forearm that is Isometric contraction against resistance for a period of 6-10 seconds with inhale and exhale, followed by slightly increasing supination until resistance was met once again. After 5 seconds of relaxation, the procedure was repeated 5 times during a single treatment session.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

muscle energy technique

Intervention Type OTHER

the subject to sit comfortably and then stabilize the subject's distal humerus with one hand, then the forearm was supinated with the therapist another hand until resistance appeared. Holding the position the subject was asked to slowly pronate the forearm that is Isometric contraction against resistance for a period of 6-10 seconds with inhale and exhale, followed by slightly increasing supination until resistance was met once again. After 5 seconds of relaxation, the procedure was repeated 5 times during a single treatment session; this technique was applied in 2 sessions for a week for 4 weeks.

oscillating manual energy therapy

It is also known as V-spread .The subject was asked to sit on a chair with the affected painful arm resting on the treatment table. Tender points were palpated. Then the therapist places the index and middle fingers of one hand in a V-shape around the tender point and placed the index finger of the other hand in the medial side of the elbow, diagonally across the located tender point. Gentle pressure was applied a few times using fingertips to the tissues alternatively from the medial and lateral sides to start the oscillations. On the initiation of oscillations, the application of pressure should be stopped and allow the oscillations to continue between the two points of contact on the subject's elbow. This technique was repeated until there were no tender points on palpation. The duration varied from 30 seconds to 2 minutes.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

oscillating manual energy therapy

Intervention Type OTHER

It is also known as V-spread .The subject was asked to sit on a chair with the affected painful arm resting on the treatment table. Tender points were palpated. Then the therapist places the index and middle fingers of one hand in a V-shape around the tender point and placed the index finger of the other hand in the medial side of the elbow, diagonally across the located tender point. Gentle pressure was applied a few times using fingertips to the tissues alternatively from the medial and lateral sides to start the oscillations. On the initiation of oscillations, the application of pressure should be stopped and allow the oscillations to continue between the two points of contact on the subject's elbow.

Interventions

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muscle energy technique

the subject to sit comfortably and then stabilize the subject's distal humerus with one hand, then the forearm was supinated with the therapist another hand until resistance appeared. Holding the position the subject was asked to slowly pronate the forearm that is Isometric contraction against resistance for a period of 6-10 seconds with inhale and exhale, followed by slightly increasing supination until resistance was met once again. After 5 seconds of relaxation, the procedure was repeated 5 times during a single treatment session; this technique was applied in 2 sessions for a week for 4 weeks.

Intervention Type OTHER

oscillating manual energy therapy

It is also known as V-spread .The subject was asked to sit on a chair with the affected painful arm resting on the treatment table. Tender points were palpated. Then the therapist places the index and middle fingers of one hand in a V-shape around the tender point and placed the index finger of the other hand in the medial side of the elbow, diagonally across the located tender point. Gentle pressure was applied a few times using fingertips to the tissues alternatively from the medial and lateral sides to start the oscillations. On the initiation of oscillations, the application of pressure should be stopped and allow the oscillations to continue between the two points of contact on the subject's elbow.

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Presence of tenderness point on lateral epicondyle.
* Positive cozen test, mills test, Maudsley's test
* Negative Radial nerve test

Exclusion Criteria

* Cervical spine disorder
* Peripheral neuropathy
* Fractures
* Major upper limb surgery
* Steroid injections in last 6 months
* Tumor or wound
* take any kind of physiotherapy treatment
Minimum Eligible Age

25 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

45 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Riphah International University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Maria Khalid, MSOMPT

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Riphah International University

Locations

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National Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine,

Islamabad, Punjab Province, Pakistan

Site Status

Countries

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Pakistan

Other Identifiers

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REC 01053 Huma mehrin

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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