Skip to content

Effects of Cervical Spine Manipulation in Patients With Mechanical Neck Pain

Effects of Cervical Spine Manipulation on Proprioception, Blood Pressure and Respiratory Rate in Patients With Mechanical Neck Pain

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05649397
Enrollment
30
Registered
2022-12-14
Start date
2022-12-01
Completion date
2023-07-10
Last updated
2023-07-27

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

Conditions

Neck Pain

Keywords

pain, proprioception, blood pressure, respiratory rate, cervical manipulation

Brief summary

Mechanical neck pain is known as one of the most common disorders in musculoskeletal system. In elderly population, prevalence of neck pain ranges up to 38% while point prevalence and lifetime prevalence ranges from 6% to 22% and 14.2% to 71% respectively . Neck pain is defined by the international association for the study of pain as: Pain perceived as arising from anywhere within the region bounded superiorly by superior nuchal line, inferior by transverse line through the tip of first thoracic spinous process, and laterally by sagittal plane tangential to the lateral border of neck . There are variable causes of neck pain like trauma, infections, inflammatory conditions, musculoskeletal conditions, rheumatic diseases, and congenital diseases . There are varying degrees of disability and activity limitation caused by neck pain, like work productivity reduction and decrease quality of life . People who have a sedentary lifestyle, poor occupational postures, students with poor posture, people involved in occupation like computer programming, clerical job workers and desk job works are more likely to suffer from mechanical neck pain . Most common cause of mechanical neck pain is muscle tightness, Upper trapezius and levator scapulae are the most involved muscles

Detailed description

Neck pain can over time negatively affect the central processing of any afferent input received because it can create a disturbance in the proprioceptive input to the Central Nervous System. Vuillerme stated that cervical muscle proprioceptors are stimulated by painful electrical stimuli. Therefore, joint proprioception can be affected in patients with mechanical neck pain . The conservative management of mechanical neck pain includes many treatment options like electrotherapy which includes moist heat, Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation therapy and different manual therapy options like cervical and thoracic mobilization and manipulation, Natural Apophyseal Glides and Sustained Natural Apophyseal Glides, Cyriax technique, manual pressure release, ischemic compression and proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation. Postural reeducation and strength training of weak muscle group has beneficial effects. Joint mobilization and manipulation are widely used as a treatment for mechanical neck pain, as cervical mobilizations which are low velocity passive oscillatory movements are used by 90% of physiotherapist and chiropractors to treat people with neck pain.

Interventions

provide a high velocity, low-amplitude manipulation to each subject's cervical spine.

OTHERconventional therapy

15 mins moist hot pack Neck Isometric exercise hold for 5-8 seconds and repeat 10 times Cervical range of motion 10 repetitions of movement in rotation within pain free range

Sponsors

Riphah International University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 45 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients with non-radiating neck pain of moderate intensity scoring 4-8 on the numeric pain rating scale (NPRS) * Have a Neck Disability Index (NDI) score of 20% or greater (10 points or greater on a 0-to-50 scale) * Patients who have cervical joint position error greater than 7.1 cm or 4.5 degrees

Exclusion criteria

* Patients with a positive history of trauma, fracture or surgery of the cervical spine . * anatomical cervical spine abnormality * presented with any neurological signs * history of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo * Neck pain with radiation to the arm and upper extremity . * Diagnosed cases of torticollis, and scoliosis * History of osteoporosis, Any cardiac disorder * had participated in a neck exercise program in the past 6 months .

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Joint position sense testfour weeksA target is placed on a wall 90cm away from the patient, at the patient's head height in sitting. The target is typically 40cm in diameter with concentric circles in 1cm increments. A laser pointer or similar targeting device is mounted onto a lightweight headband is then placed on the patient's head. The patient is then asked to focus on finding natural resting head position so that the laser pointer is in line with the center or bullseye of the target. With eyes closed, the patient will actively move their head in one plane of motion and attempt to return to the starting position as accurately as possible.
Digital sphygmomanometerfour weeksIt is the most technologically advanced sphygmomanometer. It consists of an electronic sensor to measure the blood pressure and the readings are displayed on the digital monitor. To measure the blood pressure, the instrument measures the fluctuations of arteries
Respiratory rate measurementfour weeksTo measure the respiratory rate of a person, ask the person to rest quietly for a moment. Start a timer for 60 seconds and count every time they breathe. Use the second hand on your watch or a timer on your phone to keep track of the person's breathing for exactly 1 minute. Once the minute starts, count every time you see their chest rise .
NPRS (Numeric Pain Rating Scale).four weeksThe Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS) measures the subjective intensity of pain. The NPRS is an eleven-point scale from 0 to 10. 0 = no pain and 10 = the most intense pain imaginable while the NPRS exhibited moderate reliability
NDI (U) (Neck Disability Index)four weeksThe neck disability index is a ten-item self-reported questionnaire that assesses pain and associated disability, with a total max score of 50 points. An Urdu version of neck disability index will be used in this study. An intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) revealed excellent test-retest reliability for all items (ICC = 0.86-0.98) and total scores (ICC = 0.99) of the NDI-U

Countries

Pakistan

Outcome results

None listed

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