Clinical Trials Logo

Shoulder Capsulitis clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Shoulder Capsulitis.

Filter by:
  • Recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05064033 Recruiting - Shoulder Injuries Clinical Trials

Pragmatic Posterior Capsular Stretch Versus Sleeper Stretch in Subject With Shoulder Pathologies

Start date: May 24, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The glenohumeral joint is an articulation between the glenoid of the scapula and the head of the humerus that is enclosed by a synovial capsule divided into three main components: anterior, posterior, and the axillary pouch. Symptoms of posterior capsule tightness are linked to altered shoulder biomechanics and impairments which includes glenohumeral internal rotation deficit, incomplete glenohumeral adduction, impaired inferior glenohumeral ligament (IGHL) function, and increased risk of impingement symptoms. In the literature the two techniques available for stretching posterior capsule are pragmatic posterior capsular stretch and sleeper stretch. Pragmatic posterior capsular stretch is therapist administered and sleeper stretch is patient-administered. The work on the pragmatic posterior capsular stretch is more specified and rational to mark the tightness in the posterior capsule.

NCT ID: NCT04847180 Recruiting - Shoulder Capsulitis Clinical Trials

Study of the Antipodal Capsular Fold and Its Potential Role in Antero-inferior Glenohumeral Instability

INSTABIO
Start date: August 26, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In schoulders instabilty, the soft tissue has not been the subject of histological studies, as has the "bare area" or zone devoid of cartilage, the exact role of which in glenohumeral biomechanics is unknown. This research is based on the hypothesis that the antipodal lesions are constant, underestimated and that an architectural disorganization at the capsulo-ligament level could contribute to the instability of the shoulder. The aim of this study is therefore to better characterize these lesions which could be the subject of a complementary stabilization procedure even in the absence of a humeral notch