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Clinical Trial Summary

The plantar fasciitis (PF), most frequent injury of the musculoskeletal system, is the main cause of heel pain and functional disability. The mechanical stress, stretching of plantar fascia consequently the overload on the feet, is a major intrinsic causes the onset of FP, especially when exposed to repetitive activities, such as walking. Another extrinsic etiologic factor of great influence is inadequate shoes that can lead to a deterioration and progression of the disease. One of the great difficulties of their conservative treatment is long rehabilitation period, lasting on average 10 to 18 months. Among them, the insoles stand out as one of the effective mechanical treatments to improve the immediate pain symptoms, in the short term. Other literary evidence, not specific to FP, has shown the benefits, the short and long term, a flexible footwear promotes more flexible feet and overload reduction. Objective: Verify therapeutic effect in the long term, a flexible footwear and low cost and orthopedic insole on the clinical aspect, functional and biomechanics of the gait of women with acute FP and chronic with presence of heel spur. It will be conducted a randomized controlled trial with blinded evaluator, in which 79 women with plantar fasciitis will be randomized and allocated to the intervention group with minimalist flexible footwear (MFG, acute n=12 and chronic=15) or the intervention group with orthopedic insole (COIG, acute n=14 and chronic n=14) or control group (CG, n=24). The intervention will have duration six months, six hours a day, seven days a week (42 hours/week). For all groups will be allowed to use pain medication support (paracetamol 500 mg) with a maximum dose of two grams daily. The primary outcome will be the symptom of pain verified by visual analogue scale (VAS), the inability to areas of the feet by the total score of the FFI (Foot Function Index), health feet by FHSQ-Br questionnaire (Foot Health Questionnaire Status) and the distance traveled by the six-minute walk test (6MWT). The secondary: plantar pressure and ground reaction force during gait, paracetamol consumption and the joint angles of the lower limbs. The effects of time (Start, 3 and 6 months), group (GIC and GIP CG) and interaction (time and group) are calculated by means of ANOVA case-wise two factors. A 5% alpha to significant differences and Cohen coefficient for describing the size effect of the intervention is assumed.


Clinical Trial Description

A prospective controlled study with random allocation. The independent variable (group) has three levels: intervention with flexible footwear, intervention with custom orthopedic insoles and control without intervention, only with medical conservative treatment. This independent variable is related to the set of dependent variables stemmed from clinical, functional and biomechanical data. All groups, both will use the intervention minimalist flexible footwear (MFG), as the intervention group insole (COIG) and the group that did not receive intervention (GC) shall consist of patients with PF (plantar fasciitis) in different stages of the disease.These will be required to fit in all the pre-established criteria for diagnosis of the disease confirmed by physical examination, X-ray and ultrasound. Patients in the group with chronic fasciitis plantar associated with heel spur should necessarily present themselves diagnosed radiographically by the doctor that came in the Rheumatology Clinic of the University. All participants will be informed of the procedures in this research through a free and informed consent form, prepared in accordance with Resolution 466/12 of the National Health Board. The eligibility criteria for this study will be: female volunteers aged between 30 and 50 years, body mass index (BMI) less than 35 kg / m2, no history of any surgical procedure on knees, ankles and hips or muscle injury in the last 6 months and no neurological and rheumatologic disease diagnosed. Furthermore, they may not show difference in length of the lower limbs greater than 1 cm and rigid hallux and performing some kind of conservative treatment for PF, except drug. Patients should be able to walk independently for at least 6 hours a day without the aid of orthotics / canes to perform their activities of daily living. There may also have prostheses and / or orthoses in the lower limbs. Patients may not have received corticosteroid injection in the heel in previous periods of three and six months, respectively. In addition to these criteria, patients may not present: joint instability ankle (positive test results of the medial ligament and lateral), dementia or inability to provide information consistent.It will be conducted a randomized controlled trial with blinded evaluator, in which 75 women with plantar fasciitis will be randomized and allocated to the intervention group with flexible footwear (MFG, acute n=15 and chronic=15) or the intervention group with orthopedic insole (COIG, acute n=15 and chronic n=15) or control group (CG, n=15). The intervention will have duration six months, six hours a day, seven days a week (42 hours/week). For all groups will be allowed to use pain medication support (paracetamol 500 mg) with a maximum dose of two grams daily. The primary outcome will be the symptom of pain verified by visual analogue scale (VAS), the inability to areas of the feet by the total score of the FFI (Foot Function Index), health feet by FHSQ-Br questionnaire (Foot Health Questionnaire Status) and the distance traveled by the six-minute walk test (6MWT). The secondary: plantar pressure and ground reaction force during gait, paracetamol consumption and the joint angles of the lower limbs. The effects of time (Start, 3 and 6 months), group (GIC and GIP CG) and interaction (time and group) are calculated by means of ANOVA case-wise two factors. A 5% alpha to significant differences and Cohen coefficient for describing the size effect of the intervention is assumed. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03040557
Study type Interventional
Source University of Sao Paulo
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 1, 2017
Completion date December 1, 2019

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