Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Background: Chronic neck pain (CNP) is a major health problem affecting individuals with high prevalence and subsequent complications which interfere with the physical, personnel, and psychological status. The capacitive and resistive radiofrequency therapy (CRRT) is a relatively new treatment modality used in rehabilitation with no evidence on its efficacy on chronic neck pain. Objective: The aim of the present study is to investigate the effect of the CRRT alone or with manual therapy in the treatment of patients with patients with non-specific CNP. Hypotheses Is the application of the CRRT when applied alone or with combination with manual therapy and exercises effective in decreasing pain and improving the function and strength in patients with non-specific chronic neck pain?? Methods: 60 patients will participle in the study. They will be recruited from the hospital in mecca, Saudi Arabia. They will be randomized into three groups. Group I will be treated with stretching exercises (EX) and manual therapy (Manual + EX group). Group II will be treated with CRRT plus exercises (CRRT+ EX group). Group III will be treated by EX plus manual therapy applied during CRRT for groups (Manual + CRRT+ EX group). For groups II and III, capacitive electrodes will be applied for five minutes. Then the resistive electrodes will be applied for 10 minutes and finally the capacitive will be applied again for another five minutes. Assessment of the neck pain, function, CROM, trigger points, neck muscle strength as well as neck angles will be performed. Measurement will be performed before, after 6 weeks, and 6 months of treatment as follow up measurements. Multivariate analysis of variance was used to compare between and within groups. The level of statistical significance is set as P<0.05.


Clinical Trial Description

Chronic neck pain (CNP) is a major health problem affecting individuals with high prevalence 90.4 to 86.8% of the population) and comes secondary to low back pain. It exerts negative pressure on personnel, their families, and health organizations in addition to the decreases of workdays and productivity loss. CNP may be associated with referred pain, restricted range of motion, headache, presence of trigger points, dysfunction of the cervical musculature and presence of faulty posture. Rehabilitation of patients with CNP may include the mechanical, electrical and /or, thermal modalities which are applied with the manual techniques and exercise therapy. The capacitive and resistive radiofrequency therapy (CRRT) is a long-wave diathermy with a long-lasting thermal effect used to decrease pain and muscle spasm in case of lumbago, fibromyalgia, and knee osteoarthritis. Literature comparing the efficacy of each modality with exercise or with manual therapy. Previous literature used CRRT for only its thermal effect. The CRRT may combine the effect of thermal, electrical, and mechanical modalities as well as the effect of exercise and manual therapy with a new technique not used previously. This study is the first study using CRRT with a new technique which combines the effect of the CRRT with the manual therapy to treat patients with CNP. Objective of the project: The aim of the present study is to investigate the effect of the CRRT in the treatment of patients with non-specific CNP. The CRRT will be applied to the posterior neck and shoulder areas for two sessions per week for six weeks. CRRT will be applied alone or combined with manual therapy and stretching exercises. 1. To investigate the short-term effect of the CRRT on the neck pain, function, and cervical range of motion (ROM), the pressure pain threshold of the trigger points trapezius upper fibers, neck muscle strength, and the neck angles. 2. Compare the effect of CRRT alone to the combined effect of CRRT and manual therapy on the measured outcomes. 3. To investigate the long-term effect of CRRT alone or combined with manual therapy on patients with non-specific CNP. Hypotheses Is the application of the CRRT when applied alone or in combination with manual therapy and exercises effective in decreasing pain and improving the function and strength in patients with non-specific chronic neck pain?? Ethical Approval: this protocol had an ethical approval from the Institute Review Board of biomedical research ethics committee, Umm Al-Qura University Makkah, Saudi Arabia A written consent form also will be provided for all participants. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05428254
Study type Interventional
Source Umm Al-Qura University
Contact Mohamed S Alayat, Ph.D
Phone +966566003665
Email mohsalahpt@hotmail.com
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date July 2022
Completion date December 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT05617365 - Treating Chronic Cervicogenic Head and Neck Pain Phase 1/Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05607459 - Dry Needling, Manual Therapy and Exercise for Neck Pain Management N/A
Completed NCT04256031 - Effects of Smartphone Use on Posture, Pain, Function and QoL
Recruiting NCT05074381 - Dry Needling of the M. Obliquus Capitis Inferior on Rotational Mobility and Headache Related Outcome Measures in CH. N/A
Completed NCT04113824 - The Efficacy and Safety of Trapezius MSAT on Acute Whiplash Injury N/A
Recruiting NCT05605132 - SENSORY RE-TRAINING IN PATIENTS WITH CHRONIC NECK PAIN N/A
Completed NCT05111704 - Short-term Effects of Postural Taping on Pain and Neck Posture N/A
Completed NCT04725825 - Central Pain Modulatory Effects of Dry-Needling in Patients With Non-Specific Neck Pain N/A
Completed NCT04378959 - Lidocaine Patch for Neck Pain N/A
Completed NCT03241134 - Changes in Surface EMG Activity After Dry Needling Compared to Sham Needling N/A
Completed NCT05524623 - Comparative Effect of MEP With or Without Current Emission in the Treatment of Cervical Pain in MTrPs of the Trapezius N/A
Completed NCT03176654 - The Effect of Manipulation of the Cervical Spine on Pain Biomarkers N/A
Withdrawn NCT03859011 - Acupuncture Relief for Chronic Neck Pain N/A
Completed NCT03495076 - Perceptual Distortions in Acute Neck Pain N/A