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Clinical Trial Summary

This clinical trial study evaluates the effectiveness of a multimodal physiotherapy treatment based on a biobehavioural paradigm in the treatment of non-specific chronic low back pain. The experimental group received treatment based on therapeutic exercise, education in neuroscience, and manual therapy, contrary to the control group, which did not receive manual therapy treatment.


Clinical Trial Description

Low back Pain (LBP) is defined by patients as a pain located between the low margins of the costal gridiron and the top limits of the buttock musculature, and it can either be of short or long duration. LBP is the most prevalent musculoskeletal problem, assuming a prevalence between 18,6% and 57,4%. Traditionally, the diagnosis of the DL continues to be based on pathoanatomical criteria even though, in numerous occasions, the outcomes found in complementary tests of image do not correlate with the intensity of pain and the level of disability of the patients. According to the guides of clinical practice, LBP can be divided in three subgroups: firstly, patients whose pain can be associated to a previous pathology, secondly, patients with a diagnosed neuropathic pain associated to a neurological condition, and lastly, patients who present LBP of unspecific characteristics, not preceded by any pathology or relevant damage. According to the World Health Organization, the latter represent 90% of the cases. Thus, this problem supposes a high index of chronicity, and it is the principal reason of labor absenteeism and disability encountered in society, as well as one of the most common motives of consultation in centers of primary care and specialized attention, which results in a high socioeconomic cost. As for the intervention of the CLBP, nowadays there are numerous studies based on disabling the processing of central and peripheral levels of pain by means of a multidisciplinary boarding based on psychology and on a biobehavioral approach. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficiency of a multimodal treatment by means of therapeutic exercise (TE) and education in neuroscience (NE), with or without manual therapy (MT).

TE is one of the most frequently used techniques, and one of the most effective in patients with CLBP. Research shows reduction of pain in healthy people through either aerobic exercise, resistance exercise, or isometric exercise, showing an increase in pain thresholds and pain intensity. NE aims to change maladaptive beliefs and erroneous thoughts that interfere in the perception of pain and which lead to increase the presence of psychological variables such as fear of movement, hypervigilance, and catastrophism, enhancing the perpetuation and chronicity of the same. Additionally, MT offers a wide range of specific techniques for the treatment of musculoskeletal disorders with the aim of obtaining a modulation of pain through the neurophysiological effects produced at both peripheral and central levels.

The hypothesis of the present study is that TE, when combined with both NE and MT, is more effective on the principal variables of study after 3 months of follow-up. It is a clinical trial randomized with masking of the assessor. An evaluation of the variables previously described will take place, and it will be measured by a trained physical therapist before receiving the treatment. The second evaluation will be conducted after finishing the intervention, whereas a last evaluation will be undertaken after 3 months of follow-up. The intervention will be carried out by a specialized physical therapist that will use a multimodal approach in a simple, randomized way by means of the software known as GraphPad, which allows us to randomly divide the participants into two groups. The group control will receive a treatment based on a total of 8 sessions, at a rate of 2 sessions per week. In total, a number of 4 sessions of NE will take place once per week during a period of four weeks, together with 7 TE sessions. The experimental group will receive the same intervention that the control group in combination with TM based on a protocol, which will develop during a period of 20-25 minutes, 2 sessions per week, in a total of 8 sessions. Groups will have to continue receiving NE and, regularly, they will receive a total of 4 follow-ups on the process of education via audio-visual material. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03181659
Study type Interventional
Source Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
Contact Roy A La Touche, physiotherapist
Phone 917401980
Email roylatouche@lasallecampus.es
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 1, 2017
Completion date May 30, 2019

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