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Efficacy of Neuromuscular Bandage Technique Against Jones Technique After the Supraespinatus Muscle Tendon Suture

Efficacy of Neuromuscular Bandage Technique Against Jones Technique After the Supraespinatus Muscle Tendon Suture: a Prospective Randomized Clinical Trial

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02812381
Enrollment
36
Registered
2016-06-24
Start date
2016-07-31
Completion date
2016-08-31
Last updated
2016-08-31

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Pain

Keywords

Trigger Points, movement

Brief summary

The suture of the supraspinatus tendon is a common surgery that requires physical therapy for back pain and functional impairment to such surgery. Kinesiotaping technique (KT) is being used to treat myofascial trigger points that appear after surgery and for the treatment of physiotherapy in the supraspinatus muscle and deltoid. To evaluate the effectiveness of KT technique over the technique of Jones (Straincounterstrain or SCS) in patients undergoing suture the tendon of the supraspinatus muscle.

Detailed description

Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of the KT technique against Jones (Strain-Counterstrain or SCS) technique in patients with the suture of the tendon of the supraspinatus muscle. Design: Test clinically controlled, randomized, masking of intervention by double placebo and blind to the subject of the essay and the Studio analyst. METHOD: Patients with supraspinatus tendon suture are randomly divided into two groups: a group treated with KT (n = 18) and other treated with SCS (n = 18). The treatment was applied the 1st, 4th and 8th day of physical therapy session. All patients were evaluated the 1st and the 12th day of the session with the visual analog scale of pain (VAS), with the scale of Disabilities of the arm, shoulder and hand (DASH) to assess the functionality and active direction-finding (ROM) to assess travel articulate.

Interventions

PROCEDUREKT

to aplicate neuromuscular bandage technique(KT)

PROCEDURESCS

To aplicate strain-counterstrain above trigger point

Sponsors

Fundacion para la Investigacion Biomedica del Hospital Universitario Ramon y Cajal
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Among patients attending the 1st and 5th week after Intervention. * Patients with age above 18 years. * Patients of both sexes. * Patients with a detectable with algometer trigger point in the supraspinatus and / or deltoid .

Exclusion criteria

* Patient with Impaired Communication . * Patients with signs of infection . * Patients with previous surgery on the shoulder or shoulder capsulitis submit . * Patient scammers cervical herniated discs or brachial neuropathy . * Patients with tumor pathology. * Patients with fibromyalgia, * Pregnant patients. * Patients with central pain . * Patients conducted simultaneously treatments .

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in the DASH between sixth and eighth week , in patients with supraespinatus muscle tendon suture.From first day of the sixth week after surgery to twelve days after of the first medition.All participants (36) has been mesured: * First day of the sixth week after surgery with DASH, * Four days later of the first medition , it repeated the technique asigned but it hasn´t been mesured. * Eight days later or the first meditión, it repeated the technique asigned but it hasn´t been mesured. * Twelve days later of the first medition , it repeated the mesured with DASH,

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in the VAS between sixth and eighth week , in patients with supraespinatus muscle tendon suture.From first day of the sixth week after surgery to twelve days after of the first medition.All participants (36) has been mesured: * First day of the sixth week after surgery with VAS scale. * Four days later of the first medition , it repeated the technique asigned but it hasn´t been mesured. * Eight days later or the first meditión, it repeated the technique asigned but it hasn´t been mesured. * Twelve days later of the first medition , it repeated the mesured with VAS

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change in the ROM between sixth and eighth week , in patients with supraespinatus muscle tendon suture.From first day of the sixth week after surgery to twelve days after of the first medition.All participants (36) has been mesured: * First day of the sixth week after surgery with ROM * Four days later of the first medition , it repeated the technique asigned but it hasn´t been mesured. * Eight days later or the first meditión, it repeated the technique asigned but it hasn´t been mesured. * Twelve days later of the first medition , it repeated the mesured with ROM

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026