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Effectiveness of the Suboccipital Inhibition Technique in Patients With Mechanical Neck Pain

Effectiveness of the Suboccipital Inhibition Technique in Patients With Mechanical Neck Pain: a Pilot Study

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02890394
Enrollment
60
Registered
2016-09-07
Start date
2016-03-31
Completion date
2016-09-30
Last updated
2016-09-07

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

Conditions

Neck Pain, Myofascial Pain

Keywords

Neck Pain, Suboccipital inhibition, Physical Therapy

Brief summary

The project is based on checking the effectiveness of the technique of suboccipital inhibition in patients with mechanical neck pain. Suboccipital inhibition technique involves the placement of the hands of the physiotherapist under the patient's head so that fingers can feel the spinous processes of the cervical vertebrae. Then the fingers slowly leads upward to contact the occipital condyles. At this point the investigator should gently move your fingers down, finding the space between the condyles and the spinous process of the axis. Then, flexing the metacarpophalangeal joints at 90 degrees, slowly raises the skull. In this technique the investigator would be carrying out the relaxation of the suboccipital muscles: lower rectus capitis posterior, superior oblique head straight back and head higher. It is a technique used very often but without knowledge about the time needed for implementation. In several studies that have used the technique it has been maintained for 2.4 or 10 minutes without agreeing how long is necessary. The study will consist of three groups formed by patients with mechanical neck pain that they applied the technique two, four or ten minutes and a control group of patients with mechanical neck pain. The four groups were measured before and after treatment the pain threshold to pressure by algometer and conduct the test repositioning of the head to show any changes after application of the technique.

Interventions

Suboccipital inhibition technique involves the placement of the hands of the physiotherapist under the patient's head so that fingers can feel the spinous processes of the cervical vertebrae. Then fingers slowly leads upward to contact the occipital condyles. At this point the investigator should gently move your fingers down, finding the space between the condyles and the spinous process of the axis. Remember that the atlas has no spinous process. Then, flexing the metacarpophalangeal joints at 90 degrees, slowly raises the skull

Sponsors

University of Alcala
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
FACTORIAL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

1. Men and women of full age . 2. ≥ 15/50 rating in the Neck Disability Index 3. Participants with good adhesion to the study . 4. Participants who have signed informed after appropriate informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

1. Cancer , inflammatory , infectious , vascular , neurological and metabolic processes. 2. Patients who are under medical treatment. 3. Patients with psychiatric illnesses. 4. Women : pregnancy. 5. Patients who have not signed the informed consent.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change from pain threshold pressure after ten minutes from the suboccipital inhibitionIt is measured at the beginning of the study. After ten minutes from the suboccipital inhibition is remeasuredThree measurements were performed with a rest period of 30 seconds between each measurement.
Change from repositioning of the head after ten minutes from the suboccipital inhibitionIt is measured at the beginning of the study. After ten minutes from the suboccipital inhibition is remeasureda target is placed on the wall in front of the subject at a distance of 90 cm and adjusted to align with the reference position of the head. a helmet with a laser on top is used. For each test subjects will be instructed to memorize the initial reference position by carrying out a maximum cervical rotation and returning to the reference position without speed limit. Subjects undertake 10 trials. Before each test, the examiner manually reposition the subject's head to the reference position. Once the subject is instructed to conduct the test measurement.

Outcome results

None listed

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