Chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) is a common inflammatory condition that significantly impairs quality of life and is often insufficiently managed with standard medical therapy alone. Emerging evidence suggests that manual therapy approaches, including osteopathic manipulative treatment, may provide additional clinical benefits by improving lymphatic drainage, modulating autonomic function, and enhancing mucociliary clearance. This randomized controlled trial aims to investigate the effectiveness of craniosacral osteopathic manipulative treatment (OM-KST) as an adjunct to standard medical therapy in individuals with chronic rhinosinusitis. Participants diagnosed with CRS will be randomly allocated into two groups: a control group receiving standard medical treatment and an intervention group receiving OM-KST in addition to medical treatment. The intervention will consist of an 8-session craniosacral osteopathic protocol applied over 4 weeks. Outcomes will be assessed at baseline, post-intervention, and follow-up periods using validated clinical and patient-reported measures. Primary and secondary outcomes will include symptom severity, nasal obstruction, pain threshold, endoscopic findings, and quality of life (e.g., SNOT-22, NOSE, EuroQol-5D). This study is designed to provide high-level evidence on the clinical effectiveness of a multidisciplinary and integrative treatment approach for CRS, addressing both subjective symptoms and objective clinical findings.
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Sinonasal Outcome Test-22 (SNOT-22) score
Timeframe: Baseline to 4 weeks (post-intervention)
Pressure pain threshold (algometry)
Timeframe: Baseline to 4 weeks (post-intervention)