AIM: Torticollis in infancy is routinely treated by child physiotherapists. The addition of manual therapy to the treatment is a new approach in Norway. As the effect of manual therapy for this condition is poorly documented, we designed a pilot study to evaluate measurement methods and examine the short-time effect of manual therapy in addition to child physiotherapy. METHODS: Randomized controlled trial, double blinded. Thirty-two patients aged 3-6 months were randomized to intervention group (manual therapy and child physiotherapy) and control group (child physiotherapy alone). PRIMARY OUTCOME: Change of symptoms because of torticollis evaluated by video recordings. SECONDARY OUTCOMES: 12 parameters including spontaneous movements, active and passive range of motion and head righting reaction. RESULTS: We found a nonsignificant tendency to greater improvement in lateral flexion (p = 0.092) and head righting reaction (p = 0.116) in the intervention group. CONCLUSION: In this pilot study, we found that in patients with moderate symptoms related to torticollis, the short-time effect of manual therapy in addition to physiotherapy is not significantly better than physiotherapy alone.
RCT Entities:
AIM: Torticollis in infancy is routinely treated by child physiotherapists. The addition of manual therapy to the treatment is a new approach in Norway. As the effect of manual therapy for this condition is poorly documented, we designed a pilot study to evaluate measurement methods and examine the short-time effect of manual therapy in addition to child physiotherapy. METHODS: Randomized controlled trial, double blinded. Thirty-two patients aged 3-6 months were randomized to intervention group (manual therapy and child physiotherapy) and control group (child physiotherapy alone). PRIMARY OUTCOME: Change of symptoms because of torticollis evaluated by video recordings. SECONDARY OUTCOMES: 12 parameters including spontaneous movements, active and passive range of motion and head righting reaction. RESULTS: We found a nonsignificant tendency to greater improvement in lateral flexion (p = 0.092) and head righting reaction (p = 0.116) in the intervention group. CONCLUSION: In this pilot study, we found that in patients with moderate symptoms related to torticollis, the short-time effect of manual therapy in addition to physiotherapy is not significantly better than physiotherapy alone.