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Effectiveness of Structured Closed Kinetic Chain and Video Based Game Exercise Program in Rotator Cuff Lesion

Investigation of Effectiveness of Structured Closed Kinetic Chain and Video Based Game Exercise Program in Rotator Cuff Lesion

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04426929
Acronym
Exercise
Enrollment
45
Registered
2020-06-11
Start date
2020-06-15
Completion date
2021-10-12
Last updated
2021-10-21

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

Conditions

Rotator Cuff Injuries

Keywords

Virtual Reality, Exercise, Rotator Cuff Injury

Brief summary

Rotator Cuff muscles are injured due to frequent use, repeated subacromial loadings and circulatory failure, traction, compression, contusion, subacromial abrasion, inflammation, injection and age-related degeneration, causing Rotator Cuff ruptures.Rotator Cuff treatment strategies vary according to the stage of the disease. While conservative treatment is preferred in Stage 1 and Stage 2 of Rotator Cuff injuries, surgical approaches are performed in stage 3. The most common conservative methods used in its treatment are corticosteroid injections, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and physiotherapy methods. When the literature is examined, there is no consensus about physiotherapy methods among conservative treatment approaches. It is stated in the literature that there is no standard exercise protocol for Rotator Cuff rehabilitation and specific exercise programs are needed. In addition, the virtual reality treatment approach, the most common example of the use of technology in rehabilitation, has begun to take part in rehabilitation studies. The aim of the project is to examine the effectiveness of video-based game exercise therapy in individuals with Rotator Cuff rupture, to develop a new exercise protocol with closed kinetic chain exercises and to investigate the most effective treatment method for Rotator Cuff ruptures.

Detailed description

INTRODUCTION: Rotator Cuff muscles are injured due to frequent use, repeated subacromial loadings and circulatory failure, traction, compression, contusion, subacromial abrasion, inflammation, injection and age-related degeneration, causing Rotator Cuff ruptures. The prevalence of rotator Cuff ruptures increases with age, it usually starts at the age of 40, and its incidence increases by 54% at 60, and 60-80% at 80. Rotator Cuff treatment strategies vary according to the stage of the disease. While conservative treatment is preferred in Stage 1 and Stage 2 of Rotator Cuff injuries, surgical approaches are performed in stage 3. The most common conservative methods used in its treatment are corticosteroid injections, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and physiotherapy methods. When the literature is examined, there is no consensus about physiotherapy methods among conservative treatment approaches. It is stated in the literature that there is no standard exercise protocol for Rotator Cuff rehabilitation and specific exercise programs are needed. In recent years, closed kinetic chain exercises have become the preferred exercises for the rehabilitation of musculoskeletal system problems. In the clinic, these exercises are preferred because they put less stress on the healing tissue, which is more functional and safe. In the literature, the study involving closed kinetic chain exercises related to Rotator Cuff ruptures is very few, and there is no structured exercise protocol in this regard. In addition, the virtual reality treatment approach, the most common example of the use of technology in rehabilitation, has begun to take part in rehabilitation studies. AIM: The aim of the project is to examine the effectiveness of video-based game exercise therapy in individuals with Rotator Cuff rupture, to develop a new exercise protocol with closed kinetic chain exercises and to investigate the most effective treatment method for Rotator Cuff ruptures. METHOD: The project will include 45 Rotator Cuff partial ruptures in accordance with the inclusion criteria in the Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Policlinic in Esenler Medipol University Hospital. Individuals who have been diagnosed with Rotator Cuff partial rupture between the ages of 18-60, who do not have a professional sports history, who have had pain for more than 4 weeks, and have not undergone any shoulder surgery will be included in our project. Individuals with symptomatic neurological findings of cervical origin, having an additional orthopedic problem on the shoulder, having mental problems, and individuals with neurological, vascular, cardiac problems that limit function will not be included in our project. Pain with Visual Analog Scale, pain threshold with algometer, Functionality with Arm, Shoulder and Hand Problems Survey, quality of life with Life Quality Scale with Rotator Cuff Patients, normal range of motion and proprioception with Fizyosoft applications, shoulder aproximation force with Fizyosoft balance system will be evaluated in all participants before and after treatment. Individuals participating in our project will be randomly divided into 3 groups. Electrotherapy program will be applied to all individuals. conventional exercise therapy will be applied to the first group. An exercise program consisting of 3 phases that runs from simple to difficult and includes closed kinetic chain exercises and proprioceptive exercises will be implemented in second group. Video group exercise program will be applied to the third group. By comparing the groups at the end of the treatment, it is aimed to find the most effective treatment method for individuals with Rotator Cuff rupture.

Interventions

Coldpack, TENS, Ultrasound agents and conventional exercise therapy (codman, wand, isometric exercise) will be applied.

An exercise program consisting of 3 phases that runs from simple to difficult and includes closed kinetic chain exercises and proprioceptive exercises will be implemented in this group.

Closed chain exercises based on video games will be applied. These exercises also include proprioceptive exercises.

Sponsors

Istanbul Medipol University Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Individuals who have been diagnosed with Rotator Cuff partial rupture between the ages of 18-60, who do not have a professional sports history, who have had pain for more than 4 weeks, and have not undergone any shoulder surgery will be included

Exclusion criteria

* Individuals with symptomatic neurological findings of cervical origin, having an additional orthopedic problem on the shoulder, having mental problems, and individuals with neurological, vascular, cardiac problems that limit function will not be included

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
VAS5 minutesThe score is determined by measuring the distance (mm) on the 10-cm line between the no pain anchor and the patient's mark, providing a range of scores from 0-100. A higher score indicates greater pain intensity.
pain threshold5 minuteswith algometer
Normal range of motion and proprioception10 minutesNormal range of motion and proprioception can be measured with Fizyosoft applications.
Shoulder aproximation force10 minutesShoulder aproximation force will be evaluated Fizyosoft balance system. The patient's shoulder should be 0 and 90 degree of flexion position. And then they give their force on the platform of the Fizyosoft system.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Functionality5 minutesArm, Shoulder and Hand Problems Survey
Rotator Cuff Quality of life Scale10 minutesThe Rotator Cuff Quality of Life Index (RC-QOL) was developed to evaluate quality oflife in patients with rotator cuff disorders.The RC-QOL consisted of 34 questions and 5 subscales: (1) symp-toms and physical complaints (SYMPTOMS), 16 items; (2) work-related concerns (WORK), 4 items; (3) recreational activities, sportsparticipation, or competition concerns (SPORTS), 4 items; (4) life-style concerns (LIFESTYLE), 5 items; and (5) social and emotionalconcerns (SOCIAL), 5 items. Respondents were given the optionof answering not applicable to 14 questions. All questions werescored on a 100-mm visual analog scale from 0 to 100. The qualityof life score was calculated by taking an average of items an-swered by respondents.

Countries

Turkey (Türkiye)

Outcome results

None listed

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