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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07047313

Impact of Adding Jones Technique to Mulligan Therapy in Patients With Cervicogenic Headache

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
90 (estimated)
Sponsor
Cairo University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

this study will be conducted to investigate impact of adding jones technique to mulligan therapy in patients with cervicogenic headache

Detailed description

Cervicogenic headache (CeH) is a secondary headache attributed to dysfunctions of the cervical spine (international headache society. CGH is a non-throbbing, unilateral, side locked headache that originates in the cervical spine and gradually spreads to the occipital, temporal and orbital areas. It is associated with neck pain or stiffness and is often aggravated by sustained neck postures, repeated neck movements or physical activity. A survey published in 2003 found that strain-counterstrain was the forth most commonly used manipulative technique among providers of osteopathy in the US. The most common explanation for the effects of strain-counterstrain is that it influences aberrant neuromuscular activity mediated by muscle spindles, local circulation and inflammatory reactions. Clinical research into the effects of strain-counterstrain has only begun to emerge in recent years . The Mulligan manoeuvre is one of the best manipulations. Unlike traditional mobilization, which relies solely on the therapist, Mulligan posited that by exerting pressure on the spinous processes in a weight-bearing stance, the facet joints would undergo a synchronized sliding motion in a parallel manner. At the same time, It requires the patient to move actively in order to achieve the perfect therapeutic effect ,The Mulligan maneuver is highly efective in the manipulative treatment of CEH A systematic review have demonstrated the efficacy of the Mulligan maneuvre for CEH on clinical pain scales and cervical range of motion after treatment

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERjones and mulligan therapyfor jones technique in upper trapezius and suboccipital muscles, the participants supine , the therapist used manual palpation to locate the tender area in the UT and sub-ossipital muscles. Once detected, pressure to the tender area was progressively increased . The participant was then repositioned passively to decrease the stress under palpation, resulting in a 70% subjective decrement in pain. That position was maintained for 90 s. eventually, the participant returned to the neutral position slowly and passively. for mulligan SNAGS,The therapist held the patient with his trunk, and wrapped the patient's head lightly with his arm on the patient's side, and placed the ring finger on the trouble spot right above the small vertebral joint. The therapist placed the thenar eminence of his opposite hand on the ring finger, which was touching the lesion site. On the site, the therapist performed gliding in the upward direction of the front pupil (45 degrees) exercises
OTHERmulligan therapymulligan SNAGS,The therapist held the patient with his trunk, and wrapped the patient's head lightly with his arm on the patient's side, and placed the ring finger on the trouble spot right above the small vertebral joint. The therapist placed the thenar eminence of his opposite hand on the ring finger, which was touching the lesion site. On the site, the therapist performed gliding in the upward direction of the front pupil (45 degrees). The hand, which was touching the spinous process, should be relaxed in order not to squeeze too hard. The source of the power of gliding on the joint surface must come from the opposite hand of the patient-contacting hand. Gliding was applied rhythmically (three times per second) and the width of gliding starts from the middle to the end+ exercises
OTHERexercises programThe exercise program will be in the form of stretching exercises for the sternocleidomastoids (SCM), the scalenes, and upper fibers of trapezius; strengthening isometric exercises for the neck flexors, extensors, lateral flexors, and neck rotators; and postural correction exercises.

Timeline

Start date
2025-06-30
Primary completion
2026-01-30
Completion
2026-01-30
First posted
2025-07-02
Last updated
2025-07-02

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07047313. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.