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Clinical Trial Summary

Rationale: Patients with acute traumatic injury to the shoulder or chest wall in de Emergency Department (ED) usually have intense pain. The patient normally is treated with oral analgesics as standard care and in shoulder injury with a sling. Pain of the shoulder or chest wall increases with movement of the affected arm and chest. Kinesiotaping is offered regularly as an additional pain treatment, but there is no hard evidence about its effectiveness. A randomized pilot study in OLVG (Bakker 2022) showed the pain decreasing more when using kinesiotaping comparing to no tape. However, a placebo-effect could not be ruled out and the pilot data need confirmation in a large cohort of patients to study the effectiveness of additional treatment with kinesiotaping in terms of pain, comfort and patient satisfaction.


Clinical Trial Description

Objective: The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of kinesiotaping on number of patients with clinically meaningful pain reduction after 1 week in patients with acute traumatic injury in shoulder or chest wall, compared to sham tape and no tape. The secondary aims are to assess the effect of kinesiotaping on pain reduction at 15 min, 3 weeks and 8 weeks, and the effects on the skin, use of oral analgesics, independence, activity pattern, progress of pain symptoms, comfort and patient satisfaction at 1, 3 and 8 weeks. Also the need of physiotherapy is one of the secondary aims. Study design: Parallel randomized controlled trial with three arms Study population: Patients of or over 18 years old with an acute single shoulder or chest wall injury (rib fracture, disruption of the acromioclavicular (AC) joint Tossy type 1 and 2, not or hardly dislocated fracture of clavicle or proximal humeral bone). Intervention (if applicable): One group will receive treatment with kinesiotaping, another group receives sham taping (no elastic tape) and the third group receives no taping. This treatment is additional to the general treatment with oral analgesics and a sling (when shoulder injury). Main study parameters/endpoints: The main study parameter is the proportion of patients who experienced a clinically meaningful reduction in pain score (≥2 points on NRS) at week 1 compared to T1. The kinesiotape group will be compared to the sham group and to the control group. Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: At 15 minutes after receiving kinesio tape, sham tape or no tape, 1 week, 3 weeks and 8 weeks after visiting the emergency department the pain of these patients is evaluated using NRS by the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI). The effect of use of oral analgesics (questionnaire), on the skin (questionnaire), on independence, activity pattern and progress of pain symptoms (Groningen Activity Restriction Scale (GARS)), comfort and patient satisfaction (Global Perceived Effect (GPE-DV)) is evaluated after 1, 3 and 8 weeks. Physiotherapy is elevated after 8 weeks. Due to the limited seriousness of the injury and the non-invasive nature of the interventions, any serious complication or adverse event is not expected. Benefits of participating this study could be pain reduction in the affected body part. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05976256
Study type Interventional
Source Onze Lieve Vrouwe Gasthuis
Contact Mireille Bakker, MSc
Phone +310205999111
Email m.e.bakker2@olvg.nl
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 1, 2023
Completion date December 31, 2025

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