Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT05952115

Efficacy of Lumbar Motor Control Training in Treatment Of Patients With Cervicogenic Headache

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
52 (estimated)
Sponsor
Cairo University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

this study will be conducted to investigate the effect of lumbar motor control training exercise on headache frequency, duration, intensity and neck functional disability in cervicogenic headache patients

Detailed description

Cervicogenic Headache is a referred pain spreading from cervical structures supplied by the upper cervical spinal nerve roots (C1-C3), this referred pain that starts from the posterior aspect of the head and neck is usually found to be unilateral, and it also can spread to the frontal, temporal and orbital aspects of the head.The patient frequently reports having a terrible headache, having less neck range of motion, performing less well at work, and having trouble focusing, that may linger for hours. The convergence of primary sensory afferents from cervical nerve roots C1 to C3 with the afferents from the occiput and trigeminal nerve causes the underlying pathology. Because of this, the Suboccipital muscles particularly, which cervical roots C1 innervates to C3, are potential risk structures. Treatment options include posture correction, cervical and upper thoracic strengthening exercises, facet joint manipulation, ultrasound therapy, laser therapy, trigger release therapy, and cervical joint mobilization.famous exercise known as "Motor control exercise" attempts to improve the coordination and effectiveness of the muscles that support and govern the spine. It can also improve coordination between the deep neck flexors and superficial neck flexors and between core muscles of the lumbar region. fifty two patients will be randomly assigned to two equal groups; experimental group will receive lumbar motor control and cervical stabilization exercises and control group will receive cervical stabilization exercises only.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERlumbar motor control exercisesthe patients will receive lumbar motor control exercises in the form of three exercises (Abdominal draw in maneuver, side-bridge, and quadruped) and the level of difficulty increased each week. For all exercises, the number of repetitions stayed the same, but the difficulty increased each week, and we progressed to the advanced level of each of the three exercises. This training achieves co-contraction of the local/deep stabilizing muscles (Transversus abdominis and multifidus) and strengthening the global/large spinal stabilizers (erector spinae and obliques).
OTHERCervical stabilization exercisesThe exercise program consisted of an axial elongation exercise, cranio-cervical flexion exercise, cervical extension exercise, and cervical-scapulothoracic strengthening exercise. The exercise program progressed based on the exercise tolerance of the patients by increasing the repetition of the exercise (10 reps to 15 reps to 20 reps). And for the resistive exercise, the participants change to an elastic band with greater resistance (progress to the next color resistance band). Exercises were performed for 20 min/session, and an exercise log recording the date and repetition of the exercises was maintained by the therapist for each participant.

Timeline

Start date
2023-07-16
Primary completion
2023-10-16
Completion
2023-10-16
First posted
2023-07-19
Last updated
2023-07-19

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05952115. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.