Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05541848

Clinical Benefits of a Multimodal Physiotherapy Programme in Fighter Pilots With Flight-related Neck Pain

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
31 (actual)
Sponsor
Universidad de Extremadura · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The aim of this study was to analyse the immediate effects of a 4-week multimodal physiotherapy program which combines cervical supervised exercises with laser-guided feedback (ELGF) and interferential current electro massage (ICE) in fighter pilots with flight-related neck pain.

Detailed description

Flight-related neck pain constitutes a clinical entity related to the performance and flight safety of fighter pilots. The aim of this study was to analyse the effectiveness of a multimodal physiotherapy program which combines supervised Exercise with Laser-Guided Feedback (ELGF) and Interferential Current Electro-Massage (ICE) in fighter pilots with flight-related neck pain. 31 pilots were randomly allocated into two groups (Experimental Group n=14; Control Group n = 17). The intervention consisted of 8 sessions (twice a week) for 4 weeks. As primary outcome measures the following variables were measured: perceived pain intensity (Numeric Pain Rating Scale) and neck disability (Neck Disability Index). The secondary outcome measures were: cervical range of movement (CRoM), joint position sense error (JPSE) and pressure pain threshold (PPT).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCervical supervised exercises with laser-guided feedback (ELGF)Cervical supervised exercises with laser-guided feedback (ELGF) is defined as a procedure of proprioceptive training based on a type of therapeutic exercise that provides external feedback to exercise, achieving an improvement in range of motion and postural control in subjects with spinal pain. For the performance of the exercise program, "Motion Guidance Clinician Kit" (Motion Guidance LLC, Denver, CO, USA.) was used. The program consisted of 4 exercises, which progressed in difficulty according to the tolerance achieved over the course of the sessions: a) Maintaining the head position (cervical stabilisation); b) Cervical flexion-extension; c) Right-left rotations; d) Right-left lateral-flexions. Each exercise consisted of 4 series of 8 repetitions, except the first one, in which the head position is maintained by pointing the laser at the centre of the panel for 30 seconds (4 series). The average time to complete the entire program did not exceed 14 minutes.
OTHERInterferential current electro massage (ICE)Interferential current electro-massage (ICE) is defined as a technique which combines simultaneously manual therapy (massage) and ICT. We used a current bipolar mode, using a carrier frequency of 4000 Hz at constant voltage and an amplitude-modulated frequency of 100 Hz (Sonopuls 692®; Enraf-Nonius BV, Rotterdam, The Netherlands), was administered. The intensity was set to provide a strong and comfortable tingling, without evoking muscle twitches even though a slight vibration (fasciculation) was allowed. The sequence combined (A) superficial stroke over the neck-shoulder for 30-45 seconds; (B) deep sliding movements, alone or (C) combined with shoulder drop, for 4-5 minutes; (D) bilateral kneading of the upper trapezius (4-5 minutes); (E) slight stretching of cervical muscles (upper trapezius, sternocleidomastoid, and levator scapulae); and repetition of step (A). The electro-massage protocol lasted 15 minutes.

Timeline

Start date
2022-09-15
Primary completion
2022-10-11
Completion
2022-12-14
First posted
2022-09-15
Last updated
2024-03-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Spain

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05541848. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.