Cervical Unilateral Antero-posterior Mobilization and Thoracic Central Postro-anterior Mobilizati… (NCT06349746) | Clinical Trial Compass
CompletedNot Applicable
Cervical Unilateral Antero-posterior Mobilization and Thoracic Central Postro-anterior Mobilization in Treatment of Shoulder Impingement Syndrome
Egypt56 participantsStarted 2024-04-01
Plain-language summary
Shoulder impingement syndrome (SIS) is a complex, multi-factorial problem that is treated with a variety of different conservative options. The conservative option that has shown effectiveness is manual therapy of the cervical and thoracic spine
Who can participate
Age range25 Years – 45 Years
SexMALE
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Inclusion criteria required at least three positive findings from five diagnostic tests for SIS (Hawkins-Kennedy test, Neer's test, painful arc, Resisted External Rotation test, Jobe's test) and persistent shoulder pain (anterolateral shoulder region) for 3 to 6 months, along with limitations in functional movements as Individuals who experienced painful restrictions in their ability to raise their shoulder (flexion, abduction, scaption) and had pain or limitations when performing functional movements such as reaching behind their back or behind their head. As well as subjects who willingly participated in the study and gave their consent for the research purposes.
Exclusion criteria included adhesive capsulitis, radiologically confirmed grade III rotator cuff tears, calcific tendinitis, neurological or systemic disorders, cervical radiculopathy, prior shoulder surgery, recent corticosteroid injections, or recent physiotherapy within the previous three months. Patients complain from shoulder pain without pain on palpation, mobility limitations or pain during provocative tests, but complaining of abdominal tenderness on palpation were also excluded from this study.
What they're measuring
1
pain intensity
Timeframe: pre intervention and after 6 weeks of intervention
2
shoulder flexion and abduction range of motion
Timeframe: pre intervention and after 6 weeks of intervention
3
muscle strength
Timeframe: pre intervention and after 6 weeks of intervention