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RecruitingNCT07229287

Kinetic Control Exercises to Reduce Pain and Improve Balance, Walking, and Stamina in Sacroiliac Joint Issues

Effects of Kinetic Control Training on Pain, Postural Stability, Gait and Endurance in Patients With Chronic Sacroiliac Joint Dysfunction

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
46 (estimated)
Sponsor
Lahore University of Biological and Applied Sciences · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of the Kinetic control on pain, endurance, Gait and postural stability in patients suffering from chronic sacroiliac joint dysfunction. The main question it aims to answer is: * Does kinetic control training work on pain in SIJ dysfunction? * Does kinetic control therapy work on functional outcomes, including gait metrics, postural sway, and lumbar endurance? The treatment arm will receive the Kinetic control training, and the comparison arm will undergo standard physical therapy care. Participants will be asked to perform movement control exercises based on the principle of kinetic control training core muscles and hip muscles after routine physical therapy. The participants in the control/comparison group will only receive routine physical therapy that includes a heating pad, TENS, joint mobilizations, and stretching and strengthening exercises.

Detailed description

The sacroiliac joint connects the lower part of the spine (sacrum) to the pelvic bones (ilium) and helps transfer body weight between the upper body and legs. It plays an important role in providing stability while allowing limited movement during walking or bending. Sacroiliac joint dysfunction (SIJD) occurs when the joint becomes inflamed, stiff, or moves abnormally. This may cause pain in the lower back, buttocks, or thighs, sometimes spreading to the groin or legs. People with SIJD often experience difficulty standing for long periods, walking, or bending. The condition is commonly mistaken for lumbar spine or hip problems because of overlapping symptoms. Research shows that 15-30% of people with long-term lower back pain may actually have SIJ dysfunction, but many cases go undiagnosed due to the absence of a single definitive test. Kinetic control is a movement-based physiotherapy method that focuses on retraining how muscles coordinate to stabilize and move joints. It aims to correct poor movement control, improve muscle endurance, and restore healthy patterns of motion, particularly in the core and hip muscles. By improving control and alignment, kinetic control training may reduce pain and enhance posture, walking ability, and overall function. In this 8-week randomized controlled trial, participants with chronic SIJ dysfunction will be assigned to one of two groups. The intervention group will receive kinetic control-based exercises in addition to routine physiotherapy, while the control group will receive standard physiotherapy treatments such as heat therapy, TENS, joint mobilizations, stretching, and strengthening exercises. Assessments will be conducted at the beginning, after 4 weeks, and after 8 weeks, measuring pain, balance, gait, and lumbar muscle endurance using validated tools. The study aims to determine whether kinetic control provides greater improvements in pain relief, postural control, walking performance, and endurance compared to routine care in individuals with chronic sacroiliac joint dysfunction.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERmovement retraining/ kinetic controlthis intervention is for experimental group. Kinetic control is grounded in the principles of motor control training and movement retraining. In this study, this intervention primarily focuses on activating and strengthening two key muscle groups: the abdominals and obliques, along with the gluteal muscles.
OTHERRoutine Physical therapyRoutine physical therapy intervention will be given to the patient which includes, hot pack for 15 mins and exercise therapy for 25 mins, involving floor sessions including sacroiliac joint self-mobilization, piriformis, gluteus medius, minimums, and maximus stretches, leg pressing inward/outward, knee-to-shoulder stretch, quadriceps and hamstring stretches, standard and one-leg elevated

Timeline

Start date
2025-08-17
Primary completion
2026-01-20
Completion
2026-02-10
First posted
2025-11-14
Last updated
2025-11-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Pakistan

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07229287. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.