Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Acute Effects of Hip and Knee Exercises on Pain Sensitivity in Young Adult Females With Long-standing Patellofemoral Pain - a Randomized Crossover Study.
Verified date | June 2017 |
Source | Aalborg University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Patellofemoral pain (PFP) is highly prevalent in both adolescent and adult populations and
as much as 91% of those affected experience ongoing knee pain for up to 20 years after the
initial diagnosis.
Exercise-based treatment focusing on strengthening the muscles around the hip and knee is
usually effective when treating patient with PFP. However, this approach has proven
ineffective in a subgroup of females who have suffered from PFP for multiple years.
This group was found to have a significantly lower tolerance for pressure stimuli compared
to healthy controls. This indicating that central mechanisms within the nervous system
rather than the problem being the knee itself.
Exercising a non-painful muscle distant to a painful part of the body has previously been
effective in deceasing pain in affected area. This mechanism has been investigated in
patients with long-standing musculoskeletal pain as well as healthy populations.
Related research has suggested that a possible link between patients perception of painful
stimuli an the pain-reducing effect of exercise exists. As such, patients witch experienced
a pain reducing effect of exercise was found to be able to tolerate more pain than before
the intervention.
The aim of this study is to assess if exercising a distant non-painful muscle around the hip
has a larger acute pain-reducing effect on knee pain compared to knee specific exercises in
female patients with long-standing PFP.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 30 |
Est. completion date | June 1, 2017 |
Est. primary completion date | May 17, 2017 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 20 Years to 25 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Participants with PFP are required to have current non-traumatic anterior or retropatellar knee pain which they have experienced ongoing or recurrently for a duration of at least 5 years. - At least two of the following daily activities should provoke knee-related symptoms: prolonged sitting or kneeling, squatting, running, hopping, or stair walking, tenderness on palpation of the patella or double leg squatting. - Worst pain during the previous week have to be of more than 3 cm on a 10-cm visual analog scale (VAS). Exclusion Criteria: - Patients who have sustained a traumatic injury to the hip, knee, ankle or the lumbar spine within the past 3 month will be excluded. - Other identifiable knee conditions in isolation (that is, not occuring concurrently with PFP. As an example, if the subject has isolated patellar tendinopathy they will be excluded. If the subject has PFP and concurrent pain at the patellar tendon, they will be included). - Individuals with rheumatoid arthritis, knee joint effusion, self-reported patellofemoral instability, known malign conditions, neurological disease or previously knee surgery will be excluded as well. - In cases with suspicion of serious pathology a rheumatologist will be consulted. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Denmark | Research Unit For General Practice in Aalborg | Aalborg |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Aalborg University |
Denmark,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in Pain pressure threshold (PPT) at the center of patella. | The acute effect of hip versus knee exercises on PPT at the center of patella will be compared. These measures will be taken from the test limb. PPT is defined as the point where pressure becomes painful and will be assessed by handheld pressure algometry (SOMEDIC Electronics, Solna, Sweden). The pressure will be applied with at a rate of 30 kPa/s at a perpendicular angle, to a 1cm2 area on the skin surface. Subjects will be given a handheld switch and will be instructed to press it as soon as the stimulus changes from pressure to pain. PPT will be measured twice at each time-point and the average will be calculated and used for the analyses. A mark will be drawn on the center of patella to make sure the two measures are taken from the same site. There will be a 30-second break between each measurements. | This will be assessed at 1) baseline, 2) approximately 5 minutes after the first exercise intervention (hip or knee) and 3) approximately 5 minutes after the second exercise intervention (hip or knee). | |
Secondary | Change in PPT at the muscle belly of the m. tibialis anterior. | The acute effect of hip versus knee exercises on PPT at the muscle belly of the m. tibialis anterior will be compared. These measures will be taken from the test limb. PPT is defined as the point where pressure becomes painful and will be assessed by handheld pressure algometry (SOMEDIC Electronics, Solna, Sweden). The pressure will be applied with at a rate of 30 kPa/s at a perpendicular angle, to a 1cm2 area on the skin surface. Subjects will be given a handheld switch and will be instructed to press it as soon as the stimulus changes from pressure to pain. PPT will be measured twice at each time-point and the average will be calculated and used for the analyses. A mark will be drawn on the muscle belly of the m. tibialis anterior to make sure the two measures are taken from the same site. There will be a 30-second break between each measurements. | This will be assessed at 1) baseline, 2) within 20 minutes after completing the first exercise intervention (hip or knee) and 3) within 20 minutes after completing the second exercise intervention (hip or knee). | |
Secondary | Change in PPT at the lateral epicondyle on the contralateral elbow. | The acute effect of hip versus knee exercises on PPT at the lateral epicondyle on the contralateral elbow will be compared. These measures will be taken from the contralateral elbow of the test limb. PPT is defined as the point where pressure becomes painful and will be assessed by handheld pressure algometry (SOMEDIC Electronics, Solna, Sweden). The pressure will be applied with at a rate of 30 kPa/s at a perpendicular angle, to a 1cm2 area on the skin surface. Subjects will be given a handheld switch and will be instructed to press it as soon as the stimulus changes from pressure to pain. PPT will be measured twice at each time-point and the average will be calculated and used for the analyses. A mark will be drawn on the lateral epicondyle on the contralateral elbow to make sure the two measures are taken from the same site. There will be a 30-second break between each measurements. | This will be assessed at 1) baseline, 2) within 20 minutes after completing the first exercise intervention (hip or knee) and 3) within 20 minutes after completing the second exercise intervention (hip or knee). | |
Secondary | Change in pain detection threshold (PDT) measured with cuff pressure allometry at the lower leg of both limbs. | The cuff will inflate with 1 kPa per second and the participants are instructed to start rating their pain on the electronic VAS as soon as the sensation of pressure becomes painful (pain detection threshold). | This will be assessed at 1) baseline, 2) within 20 minutes after completing the first exercise intervention (hip or knee) and 3) within 20 minutes after completing the second exercise intervention (hip or knee). | |
Secondary | Change in pain tolerance threshold (PTT) measured with cuff pressure allometry at the lower leg of both limbs. | The cuff will inflate with 1 kPa per second and the participants are instructed to start rating their pain on the electronic VAS as soon as the sensation of pressure becomes painful. Participants are instructed to press the release button when the pain becomes intolerable (pain tolerance threshold). | This will be assessed at 1) baseline, 2) within 20 minutes after completing the first exercise intervention (hip or knee) and 3) within 20 minutes after completing the second exercise intervention (hip or knee). | |
Secondary | Change in temporal summation of pain assessed by cuff pressure allometry at the lower leg of the test limb. | The cuff will apply 10 repetitive stimulus at 100% of the PTT measured by the cuff algometer on the test limb. Each stimulus has a duration of 1 second followed by 1 second where the cuff is deflated. The participant will be asked to rate the pain intensity on an electronic VAS continuously throughout the test. The cuff-system software will automatically identify the highest recorded VAS within each of the 1 second deflations. | This will be assessed at 1) baseline, 2) within 20 minutes after completing the first exercise intervention (hip or knee) and 3) within 20 minutes after completing the second exercise intervention (hip or knee). | |
Secondary | Change in condition pain modulation assessed by cuff pressure allometry at the lower leg of the test limb. | Data on PDT and PTT from the contralateral limb will be used to calibrate the cuff system before this test. The cuff on the contralateral limb will inflated to 70% of the PTT measured from the contralateral limb. Participants are instructed to ignore this pressure an to only focus on the test limb. As before, the cuff on the test limb will inflate with 1 kPa per second and the participants are instructed to start rating their pain on the electronic VAS scale as soon as the sensation of pressure becomes painful (PDT). Participants are instructed to press the release button when the pain becomes intolerable (PTT). | This will be assessed at 1) baseline, 2) within 20 minutes after completing the first exercise intervention (hip or knee) and 3) within 20 minutes after completing the second exercise intervention (hip or knee). | |
Secondary | Change in self-reported pain before and after each exercise set reported on a numeric pain rating scale (NPRS). | Participants will be asked to rate their knee pain intensity right before and immediately after each of the three sets within each exercise. The mean difference between the before and after assessments will be calculated and analyzed. | This will be assessed during the first exercise intevention (hip or knee) and approximately 30 minutes after, during the second exercise intervention (hip or knee). |
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