Clinical Trials Logo

Chronic Nonspecific Neck Pain clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Chronic Nonspecific Neck Pain.

Filter by:
  • Recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05871775 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Nonspecific Neck Pain

Effects of Therapeutic Intervention Through Selective Functional Movement Assessment on Pain, Function, Balance and Gait in Patients With Chronic Nonspecific Neck Pain

Start date: April 30, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

According to the order of the physical examination, the scope of the problem is narrowed down by excluding the parts of the body that do not have problems and adjusting the load related to stability. A list of problems can be created through an algorithmic approach that guesses which structures will have problems through active or passive movement. This provides an optional therapeutic intervention.

NCT ID: NCT04306640 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Chronic Nonspecific Neck Pain

Impact of Cervical Lordosis Rehabilitation on Autonomic Nervous Function and Cervical Sensorimotor Control

Start date: May 5, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Objective: To investigate the immediate and long-term effects of cervical lordosis restoration and anterior head translation (AHT) correction, on pain, disability, autonomic nervous system function and cervical sensorimotor control in Athletes with Chronic nonspecific neck pain. Methods: 110 (51 female) chronic nonspecific neck patients with a defined hypolordotic cervical spine and AHT posture will be randomly assigned to the control or an experimental group. Both groups will receive a multi-modal program; additionally, the experimental group will receive the dennerollâ„¢ cervical traction. Interventions will be applied 3 x per week for 10 weeks. Outcome measures will include absolute rotatory angle (ARA), AHT, neck disability index (NDI), pain intensity, smooth pursuit neck torsion test (SPENT), overall stability index , left and right rotation repositioning accuracy , amplitude and latency of skin sympathetic response . Measures will be assessed at three time intervals: baseline, after 10 weeks of intervention, and at 1-year follow up.