Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of Tibiofemoral Mobilization in Patients of Patellofemoral Pain Syndrome
The aim of this research was to determine the effects of tibiofemoral joint mobilization in patients of patellofemoral pain syndrome. Tibiofemoral joint mobilization effects on pain and Range of Motion (ROM) in knee joint. A randomized controlled trial was done at Lady Reading Hospital Peshawar and Hayatabad Medical Complex Peshawar. The sample size was 52. The Participants were divided into two groups, 26 participants in experimental group and 26 in control group. The study duration was 4 months. Sampling technique applied was purposive non probability sampling technique. Only 25 to 35 years participants with patellofemoral pain syndrome were included. Tools used in this study were Numerical pain rating scale (NPRS), Kujala Score Questionnaire, Goniometer and Algometer.
Patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS) is the most common overuse injury characterized by
anterior and peripatellar knee pain, associated with physical activities in Active Daily
Living (ADL) such as climbing stairs, squatting, jumping, and running and by sitting with the
knees flexed for prolonged periods of time. It mainly affects young women without any
structural changes such as increased Q-angle or significant pathological changes in articular
cartilage. It mainly affects young women without any structural changes such as increased
Q-angle or significant pathological changes in articular cartilage. Patellofemoral pain has
prevalence of 23% in adults and 29% in adolescents annually in general population. Its
incidence is higher in women as compare to men and is located at 22/1000 person per year. It
accounts for 25-40% of all knee complaints in sports medicine. The prevalence of this problem
is high because it can occur in patients with a wide range of physical activity levels.
The main symptom of PFPS is anterior knee pain or pain around and behind patella during
patellofemoral joint loading activities. The pathophysiology of PFPS is multifactorial.
External factors; change in training intensity and frequency, training surfaces and
inappropriate shoe wear, while intrinsic factors includes muscle and soft tissue imbalance
and malalignment of lower extremity and poor biomechanics of foot. In PFPS patients' dynamic
valgus and patellar maltracking is common. Decrease strength of hip abductors, abnormal rear
foot eversion can cause dynamic valgus. Further other muscles imbalance is also associated
with PFPS i.e. vastus medialis, vastus lateralis, quadriceps, hamstring and iliotibial tract.
Correction of biomechanical imbalance and decreased anterior knee pain as therapeutic
exercise has already been shown to be effective in the treatment of PFPS for pain and
function. Conservative treatment involves a multimodal physiotherapy approach including
patient education, activity modification, neuromuscular electric stimulation on quadriceps,
therapeutic ultrasound, biofeedback, exercises for enhancing the activity of Vastus Medialis
Obliquus (VMO) muscle, lower extremity-strengthening exercises, and proximal stabilization,
stretching exercises on tight structures, bracings, foot orthoses, patellar mobilization and
taping techniques. Patellofemoral pain syndrome is treated through conservative methods from
long period of time but
tibiofemoral mobilization is not practiced very much while standard mobilization is patellar
mobilization, it can be painful to mobilize patella. So the goal of this study is determine
the effect of reciprocal joint mobilization i.e. tibiofemoral joint mobilization in
patellofemoral joint pain syndrome and enhance the awareness of this in practice.
Literature review A systematic and evidence based search of relevant literature was performed
by utilizing PubMed and Google Scholar as search engines. Search term for the initial
literature review was patellofemoral Pain Syndrome, Tibiofemoral mobilization, prevalence of
patellofemoral pain syndrome, causes of PFPS, pathophysiology of PFPS, treatment option for
PFPS, conservative treatment of PFPS, short term effect of Tibiofemoral mobilization,
exercise protocol of PFPS. The search was limited to papers in English preferably published
since 2010 with full text available. Different studies were available regarding PFPS but
limited data were available regarding tibiofemoral mobilization in PFPS.
A consensus statement (2018) on exercise therapy and physical interventions and mentioned
that it is recommended that exercise targeting the hip and knee is a key component of
management for all patients with patellofemoral pain, particularly when used in combination.
A consensus statement (2016) from the 4th International Patellofemoral Pain Research Retreat,
that exercises are best to treat PFPS in short medium and long term goal and also mentioned
that instead of only giving exercises of knee alone if combined hip and knee exercises would
be given to patient it will show great effect.
The short-term effects of Movement With Mobilization (MWM) and Kinesio Tapping practices
performed in addition to the exercises proved to be similar to one another.
The tibiofemoral joint manipulation with exercises for home plane give a successful results
in treating patellofemoral pain syndrome.
A systemic review mentioned that the different combinations of Manual Therapy (MT) and
physical therapy analyzed in this review suggest that giving more emphasis to proximal
stabilization and full kinetic chain treatments in PFPS will help better alleviation of
symptoms.
Another study concluded that interventions directed at the lumbopelvic region did not have
immediate effects on quadriceps force output or activation. Muscle fatigue might have
contributed to decreased force output and activation over 1 hour of testing.
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