View clinical trials related to Musculoskeletal Pain.
Filter by:Psychiatrists have expressed concern at the emergence of education as a serious source of stress for school-going children - causing high incidence of deaths by suicide. Many adolescents in India are referred to hospital psychiatric units for school-related distress - exhibiting symptoms of depression, high anxiety, frequent school refusal, phobia, physical complaints, irritability, weeping spells, and decreased interest in school work. Previous studies have found significant anxiety, distress, depression, worn outs and severe impact of psychological factors on the performances of dental, engineering and medical student. But students preparing for competitive exams have not been studied yet. Current study reports the scientific evidence of immediate effect of yoga based techniques combined with music and Vedic chants on adolescents preparing for competitive exams.
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are creating a new generation of Veterans, including an increasing number of women Veterans, who present with comorbid PTSD and chronic pain conditions from recent deployment-related physical injuries and exposure to psychological trauma. Health behavior change has become increasingly important in treating these conditions and proactively preventing long-term negative health sequelae, in order to benefit these Veterans directly and reduce the growing challenges to our healthcare system. The proposed CDA-2 program of research will use an innovative translational research approach to study whether a chronic progressive -based exercise program will reduce chronic pain in patients with PTSD and to elucidate and modify potential PTSD-related deficiencies in neurobiological and psychological responses to exercise to optimize the physical and psychological benefits of exercise for these individuals.
This study evaluates the effectiveness, safety and patient tolerance for the use of Intense Therapeutic Ultrasound (ITU) for chronic, subcutaneous lateral Epicondylitis musculoskeletal tissue pain reduction began in July 2015 and was completed in March 2017. The More Foundation/The Core Institute: Single-blinded pivotal study for the treatment of chronic lateral epicondylitis. A total 29 patients received 2 treatments, 4 weeks apart on subcutaneous musculoskeletal tissues along with Standard of Care treatments as prescribed by the Principal Investigator. Patients were followed for up to 6 months after the first treatment receiving a physical exam at each follow-up visit (4, 8 and 12 weeks) and provided feedback via Patient/Subject Reported Outcome Measure surveys specific to the treated anatomy at each visit and via phone follow-up at 26 weeks after the first treatment.
Double-blinded feasibility study for the treatment of pain related to chronic plantar fasciitis. A total 37 patients (27 treated and 12 control/sham treated) received 2 treatments, 2 weeks apart on subcutaneous plantar fascia musculoskeletal tissue along with Standard of Care treatments as prescribed by the Principal Investigator. Patients were followed for up to 6 months after the first treatment receiving a physical exam at each follow-up visit (4, 8 and 12 weeks) and provided feedback via Patient/Subject Reported Outcome Measure surveys specific to the treated anatomy at each visit and via phone follow-up at 26 weeks after the first treatment.
Background. Diabetes is a global epidemic disease. The prevalence of diabetes for all age groups worldwide was estimated to be 2.8% in 2000 and is predicted to affect 4.4% by 2030. The global prevalence of diabetics is currently estimated to be 285 million and projection rates are expected to rise to over 438 million by the year 2030, with Asians suffering the bulk of the total diabetes epidemic. The incidence of chronic diseases of lifestyle such as Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is on the increase amongst the South African population. Due to the numerous factors such as lack of education, inaccessibility of healthcare facilities and/or poor socio-economic background, diabetes mellitus often goes undetected in rural areas, resulting in an increase in musculoskeletal complication and other diabetes mellitus complications. Inability to control blood sugar may induce serious complications such as renal disease, peripheral neuropathy, retinopathy, and vascular events. Due to its multi-systemic nature, diabetes will lead to the development of additional manifestations such as musculoskeletal complications, reduces respiratory capacity, depression and poor quality of life. Studies have shown that both exercises and pharmacotherapy can decreases depression and improved glycemic control and overall quality of life of persons with diabetes. Thus, in addition improve the quality of life and substantial financial savings and improved medical care of these individuals. Hypothesis 1. There will be no statistical significant difference in glycemic control, cholesterol level, respiratory parameters, pain scores, depression and quality of life among type 2 diabetes patients at the baseline and at the end of 8 weeks of rebound exercises. 2. There will be no statistical significant difference in glycemic control, cholesterol level, respiratory parameters, pain scores, depression and quality of life among type 2 diabetes patients at the baseline and at the end of 8 weeks of circuit resistance training. 3. There will be no statistical significant difference in glycemic control, cholesterol level, respiratory parameters, pain scores, depression and quality of life among type 2 diabetes patients at the baseline and at the end of 8 weeks of routine care. 4. There will be no statistical significant difference in glycemic control, cholesterol level, respiratory parameters, pain scores, depression and quality of life among type 2 diabetes patients between the rebound exercises group, circuit training and routine care at the baseline. 5. There will be no statistical significant difference in glycemic control, cholesterol level, respiratory parameters, pain scores, depression and quality of life among type 2 diabetes patients between the rebound exercises group, circuit training and routine care at the end of 8 week of the programme. Summary of the proposed research methodology. The participants will be randomised into three groups. The first group will be engaged in rebound exercise, the second group will be engaged in circuit training while the third group will continue with their normal care of medication. But before the commencement of the study, pilot study will be conducted on normal subjects. Measurement will be carried out at the baseline, four weeks and at the end of the programme, 'The following parameters will be measured. Pain level, blood glycemic level of each participant, cholesterol level, depression and quality of life.
To determine the safety and efficacy of single intra-operative treatment of EB-001 IM injections into the Pectoralis Major (PM) in subjects undergoing breast augmentation with subpectoral implants
This study compares the efficacy of five oral analgesics: 5 mg oxycodone + 325 mg acetaminophen, 5 mg hydrocodone + 300 mg acetaminophen, 30 mg codeine + 300 mg acetaminophen, 400 mg ibuprofen + 1000 mg acetaminophen, and 800 mg ibuprofen + 1000 mg acetaminophen for the treatment of patients with acute musculoskeletal pain who present to the Emergency Department (ED).
Low back pain (LBP) is common in the population and has great socioeconomic consequences for societies across Europe and the United States. About a third of working-age adults have frequent LBP, and for about 10% the pain becomes chronic with consequences for work and leisure activities. A Cochrane review from April 2017 concluded that physical exercise is an intervention with few adverse events and positive outcomes on pain and function in adults with chronic pain. However, when scrutinizing the specific studies of the review there are large differences in adherence to the exercise interventions and consequently in the results obtained. Thus, there is a need for simple exercises that the patients can easily adhere to.
The purpose of this study is to explore the perspectives of health professionals on chronic (non-malignant) musculoskeletal pain in adolescence and young adulthood. The prevalence of this pain symptom is rising for ten years, and most of the time the diagnosis is complex. Health professionals have to differentiate between the continuing activity of a somatic problem, some painful sequelae, a low threshold for the perception of pain, and psychological symptoms with somatic expression. Diagnosis in this case takes time, and is a matter of trained specialists. No protocol exists to assess the sub-clinical symptoms which will be used to help doing this complex task. This qualitative study will elicit the perspectives of trained specialists on this diagnosis: how do they deal with these patients? What signs and symptoms helps them? The results will present their clinical experiences. The overall goal is to construct the first chronic musculoskeletal pain multidimensional scale that will help the practitioners with this complex diagnosis.
Pelvic floor muscle physical therapy is recommended in clinical guidelines for women dyspareunia and pelvic pain. This study compare pelvic floor manual therapy and intratissue percutaneous electrolysis (EPI) technique in the treatment of pelvic pain in women with dyspareunia. Half of participants will receive pelvic floor manual therapy while the other half will receive intratissue percutaneous electrolysis technique.