| Literature DB >> 26512315 |
Danielle Southerst1, Hainan Yu2, Kristi Randhawa3, Pierre Côté4, Kevin D'Angelo5, Heather M Shearer2, Jessica J Wong6, Deborah Sutton2, Sharanya Varatharajan3, Rachel Goldgrub7, Sarah Dion5, Jocelyn Cox5, Roger Menta5, Courtney K Brown5, Paula J Stern8, Maja Stupar2, Linda J Carroll9, Anne Taylor-Vaisey10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) of the upper and lower extremities are common in the general population and place a significant burden on the health care system. Manual therapy is recommended by clinical practice guidelines for the management of these injuries; however, there is limited evidence to support its effectiveness. The purpose of our review was to investigate the effectiveness of manual therapy in adults or children with MSDs of the upper or lower extremity.Entities:
Keywords: Manual therapy; Musculoskeletal disorders; Outcome; Recovery; Rehabilitation; Systematic review; Treatment; Upper and lower extremities
Year: 2015 PMID: 26512315 PMCID: PMC4623271 DOI: 10.1186/s12998-015-0075-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Man Therap ISSN: 2045-709X
Case definition of sprains [25]
| Grade | Definition |
|---|---|
| I | Sprain occurs when ligamentous fibers are stretched but remain structurally intact. |
| II | Sprain occurs when ligamentous fibers become partially torn. Physical stress reveals increased laxity with a definite end point. |
| IIIa | Sprain occurs when a ligament is completely torn, leading to gross instability. |
aGrade III sprains are excluded from this review; grade I-III ankle sprains and strains were considered if a grade specific analysis was conducted or if a trial included the same distribution of grade III injuries between intervention groups
Case definition of strains [25]
| Grade | Definition |
|---|---|
| I | Strain occurs when less than 5 % of muscle/fibers are disrupted, with fascia remaining intact. |
| II | Strain occurs when muscles fibers/tendon discontinuity involves a moderate number of muscle fibers. |
| IIIa | Strain occurs when there is complete discontinuity in the muscle fibers. |
aGrade III strains are excluded from this review; grade I-III ankle sprains and strains were considered if a grade specific analysis was conducted or if a trial included the same distribution of grade III injuries between intervention groups
Evidence table for accepted randomized controlled trials assessing the effectiveness of manual therapy for musculoskeletal disorders of the upper and lower extremities
| Author(s), Year | Subjects and Setting; Number (n) Enrolled | Interventions; Number (n) of Subjects | Comparisons; Number (n) of Subjects | Follow-up | Outcomes | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bergman et al., 2004 [ | Participants (=18 y.o) recruited from general practices in Groningen, the Netherlands. | Manual therapy and usual care: | Usual care: | 12 (immediately post-intervention), 26 and 52 weeks | Primary outcomes: | Patient-perceived recovery (manual therapy and usual care vs. usual care): |
| Case definition: Pain of variable duration between the neck and elbow at rest or during movement of the upper arm; physical examination confirming shoulder symptoms and dysfunction in the cervicothoracic spine and ribs with accompanying pain or restricted movement (n=150) | Manual therapy (up to 6 sessions over 12 weeks) by physiotherapists: manipulations and mobilization to the cervical spine, upper thoracic spine, and adjacent ribs. | Usual care (information, advice, and therapy) as outlined by the Dutch College of General | Self-perceived recovery (7point Likert scale; recovered = “completely recovered” or “very much improved”) | Proportion of participants reporting themselves ‘completely recovered’ or ‘verymuch improved’ (reference group: usual care)a: | ||
| Usual care (information, advice, and therapy) according to the Dutch College of General | Practitioners provided by GPs: delivered following same protocol as in manual therapy and usual care group (n=71) | Cure rate (self-report of shoulder symptom improvement to a point where they are no longer inconvenient) | 12 weeks: RR 2.0 (95% CI 1.2, 3.4) | |||
| 26 weeks: RR 1.2 (95% CI 0.8, 1.7) | ||||||
| Practitioners provided by GPs: | ||||||
| 52 weeks: RR 1.5 (95% 1.0, 2.2) | ||||||
| Weeks 1–2: information about the nature and course of shoulder symptoms, advice on daily activities, prescription for oral analgesics or NSAIDs if necessary. | ||||||
| Proportion of participants reporting symptom improvement to the point where they are no longer inconvenienta: | ||||||
| 12 weeks: RR 1.4 (95% CI 0.9, 2.0) | ||||||
| 26 weeks: RR 1.2 (95% CI 0.9, 1.8) | ||||||
| 52 weeks: RR 1.4 (95% CI 1.0, 1.9) | ||||||
| Difference in mean change (manual therapy and usual care – usual care): | ||||||
| Severity of main complaint (0–10) | ||||||
| 12 weeks: 1.5 (95% CI 0.5, 2.5) | ||||||
| 26 weeks: 1.2 (95% CI 0.2, 2.2) | ||||||
| 52 weeks: 1.4 (95% CI 0.4, 2.4) | ||||||
| Shoulder disability (0–100) | ||||||
| 12 weeks: 8.5 (95% CI -2.0, 18.9) | ||||||
| 26 weeks: 12.7 (95% CI 1.3, 24.1) | ||||||
| 52 weeks: 6.9 (95% CI -3.5, 20.7) | ||||||
| General health (3 point scale) | ||||||
| No difference. | ||||||
| Weeks 3–4: extension of prescription medication if necessary. | Secondary outcomes: severity of main complaint (NRS, 0–10); functional disability (SDQ, 0–100), quality of life (EuroQol, 5 items scored using 3-point ordinal scale, -1=worst; 1=best). | |||||
| Weeks 5–6: Up to 3 subacromial or glenohumeral corticosteroid injections (40mg triamcinolone acetonide with or without 10mg lidocaine) | ||||||
| Weeks 6–12: Physiotherapy shoulder exercises, massage and passive physical modalities were considered. (n=79) | ||||||
| Cook et al., 2014 [ | Patients (=18 y.o.) attending outpatient clinical/academic centers in the USA or South Africa. | Shoulder and neck treatment by physiotherapist: | Shoulder treatment by physiotherapist: | Immediately post-intervention [mean 56.1 days (SD 55.0)] | Primary outcome: Disability (QuickDASH, 0–100) | Difference in mean change (shoulder and neck treatment – shoulder treatment) a: |
| Secondary outcome: Pain (NRS, 0–10), patient satisfaction and adaptation to symptoms (PASS, acceptable = unlikely to seek further treatment, unacceptable = likely to seek further treatment) | Disability (QuickDASH 0–100): | |||||
| Case definition: Shoulder impingement syndrome (mean duration 11.7 weeks) with: 1) pain or dysfunction with overhead activities and active shoulder movements; 2) positive Neer/ Hawkins-Kennedy test; 3) onset =12 months; 4) painful arc; 5) baseline pain =2/10 (n=74) | ||||||
| Neck treatment (duration and frequency of treatment determined by the physiotherapist): Grade III posterior-anterior mobilization (3 x 30 oscillations) to stiffest or most painful segments in the cervical spine or to the C5-C6, or C6-C7 segments on the same side of shoulder impingement if joint findings were absent. | Pragmatically delivered multimodal program of care including manual therapy stretching, isotonic strengthening, and restoration of normative movement. (n=36) | |||||
| Post-intervention: 5.3 (95% CI -3.0, 13.6) | ||||||
| Pain (NRS 0–10) | ||||||
| Post-intervention: 0.5 (95% CI -0.6, 1.6) | ||||||
| No difference in the proportion of participants considering their state ‘acceptable’ (unlikely to seek further treatment) a: | ||||||
| Post-intervention: RR 0.92 (95% CI 0.73, 1.15) | ||||||
| Multimodal shoulder care: manual therapy, stretching, isotonic strengthening, and restoration of normative movement. (n=38) | No adverse events reported. | |||||
| Cleland et al., 2013 [ | Patients (16–60 y.o.) with inversion ankle sprain presenting to physical therapy clinics in Colorado. | MTEX: | HEP: | 4 weeks (immediately post-intervention) and 6 months | Primary outcome: Disability (FAAM ADL subscale; 0–100). | Differences in mean change (MTEX-HEP): |
| Manual therapy by physical therapist (2 x 30 minute sessions per week for 4 weeks): Grade I-IV mobilization (grade selected by therapist /patient tolerance) to the proximal tibiofibular joint, distal tibiofibular joint, talocrural joint, and subtalar joint. | Home exercises (daily): Instruction by a physical therapist (1 x 30 minute session per week for 4 weeks): same exercises as MTEX group | FAAM ADL (0–100): | ||||
| Home exercises (daily): mobilizing exercises for the foot and ankle, gentle strengthening exercises, resistive-band exercises, 1-leg standing activities, standing on balance board, and weight-bearing functional activities; program progressed by physical therapist as indicated | ||||||
| Advice to continue with activities that did not increase symptoms and avoid activities that aggravate symptoms. | ||||||
| Education on ice, compression, and elevation. (n=37) | ||||||
| 1 month: 11.7 (95% CI 7.4, 16.1) | ||||||
| 6 months: 6.2 (95% CI 0.98, 11.5) | ||||||
| Secondary outcomes: Disability (FAAM sports subscale; 0–100); Function (LEFS; 0–80); Pain (NRS; 0–10); global improvement (-7 to +7); recurrence | FAAM sports (0–100): | |||||
| Case definition: grade 1 or 2 inversion ankle sprain as defined by the West Point Ankle Sprain Grading System; no restriction in days since injury; NRS = 3/10 in last week; negative Ottawa ankle rules. (n=74) | Advice to continue with activities that did not increase symptoms and avoid activities that aggravate symptoms | 1 month: 13.3 (95% CI 8.0, 18.6) | ||||
| 6 months: 7.2 (95% CI 2.6, 11.8) | ||||||
| LEFS (0–80): | ||||||
| 1 month: 12.8 (95% CI 9.1, 16.5) | ||||||
| 6 months: 8.1 (95% CI 4.1, 12.1) | ||||||
| Education on ice, compression, and elevation. (n=37) | NRS (0–10): | |||||
| 1 month: 1.2 (95% CI 0.9, 1.5) | ||||||
| 6 months: 0.47 (95% CI 0.05, 0.90) | ||||||
| Global Improvement: | ||||||
| Statistically significant difference in favor of MTEX at 1 and 6 months (p<0.001). | ||||||
| Recurrencea | ||||||
| No difference in the proportion of participants reporting recurrence of their injury at 6 months: | ||||||
| RR 0.6 (95% CI 0.15; 2.33) | ||||||
| No adverse events were reported. |
Acronyms: ADL Activities of Daily Living, FAAM Foot and Ankle Ability Measure, GP General Practitioner, HEP Home exercise program, LEFS Lower Extremity Functional Scale, MTEX Manual therapy and exercise program, NRS Numeric Rating Scale, RR Relative Risk, SDQ Shoulder Disability Questionnaire, QuickDASH the Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand
arecalculated data from study
Fig. 1Identification and Selection of Articles
Summary of assessment of risk of bias for accepted randomized controlled trials based on Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) criteria [35]
| Author, Year | Research Question | Random-ization | Conceal-ment | Blinding | Similarity at baseline | Similarity between arms | Outcome measure-ment | Percent drop-outa | Intention to treat | Results comparable between sites |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bergman et al., 2004 [ | Y | CS | Y | Y | Nb | Y | Y | 12 weeks (immediately post-intervention) | Y | CS |
| UC = 14 % | ||||||||||
| MT + UC = 13 % | ||||||||||
| 26 weeks: | ||||||||||
| UC = 11 % | ||||||||||
| UC + MT = 9 % | ||||||||||
| 52 weeks: | ||||||||||
| UC = 13 % | ||||||||||
| MT + UC = 6 % | ||||||||||
| Cook et al., 2014 [ | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | CS | Y | Post-intervention: | N | CS |
| Manipulation: 2/38 = 5 % | ||||||||||
| Control: 4/36 = 11 % | ||||||||||
| Cleland et al., 2013 [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | 1 month: | Y | CS |
| MTEX: 3/37 = 8 % | ||||||||||
| HEP: 2/37 = 5 % |
Acronyms: Y Yes, N No, CS Can’t Say, NA Not Applicable, MT Manual therapy, UC Usual Care, MTEX manual therapy and home exercise, HEP Home exercise program
aPercent drop-out includes drop-outs and loss to follow-up
bBaseline differences were adjusted in the analysis