| Literature DB >> 27980724 |
Abstract
Manual therapy is often used for patients with neck pain with or without radicular symptoms. There is sparse evidence on the effectiveness in cervical radiculopathy. The aim of this study was to assess current levels of evidence on the effectiveness of manual therapy interventions for patients with cervical radiculopathy. Electronic data bases were systematically searched for clinical guidelines, reviews and randomised clinical trials (RCTs) reporting on the effectiveness of manual therapy for patients with cervical radiculopathy. Eight relevant reviews, two guidelines and two recent RCTs, that had not yet been included in either, were retrieved. The overall quality of the evidence of included studies was evaluated using the GRADE method. Most interventions were only studied in one single RCT. There is low level evidence that cervical manipulation and mobilisation as unimodal interventions are effective on pain and range of motion at the immediate follow up, but no evidence on the effectiveness of thoracic manipulation or mobilisation as unimodal interventions. There is low level evidence that a combination of spinal mobilisation and motor control exercises is more effective on pain and activity limitations than separate interventions or a wait-and-see policy. There is low level evidence of the effectiveness of cervical mobilisation with a neurodynamical intent as unimodal intervention, on the effectiveness of a multimodal intervention with neurodynamic intent on pain activity limitations and global perceived effect compared to a wait-and-see policy. There is also low level evidence that a multimodal intervention consisting of spinal and neurodynamic mobilisations and specific exercises is effective on pain in patients with CR. There is low level evidence that traction is no more effective than placebo traction.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27980724 PMCID: PMC5146882 DOI: 10.1186/s12998-016-0126-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chiropr Man Therap ISSN: 2045-709X
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart of included studies
Systematic reviews on manual therapy in patients with CR
| Author, year; included studies | Review conclusion |
|---|---|
| Boyles, [ | |
| Cleland [ | Using manual therapy techniques in conjunction with therapeutic exercise is effective in regard to increasing function, as well as AROM, while decreasing levels of pain and disability. |
| Rodine, [ | |
| BenEliyahu [ | Currently, randomized trials in the field of CR are lacking. Despite this, existing literature does provide support for the cautious application of (chiropractic) HVLA procedures in cases of confirmed or suspected CR. |
AROM Active Range of Motion, HVLA High Velocity Low Amplitude
Systematic reviews on the manual therapy treatment of patients with neck pain, also including patients with CR
| Author, year; studies including patients with CR | Review conclusion |
|---|---|
| Guzman, [ | |
| Brodin [ | There is insufficient evidence to support a decision for or against the use of a specific conservative treatment (including manual therapies) in patients with CR |
| D’Sylva [ | |
| Brodin [ | There is low level evidence of difference in pain relief, functional improvements or global perceived effect when the combination of manual therapy and physical medicine modalities is compared to placebo, exercise, various combinations of manipulation, education and rare collar use, or physiotherapy applications in patients with or without CR. |
| Gross [ | |
| Howe1985; Hurwitz 2002 | No separate conclusion that cervical and /or thoracic manipulation is more effective for patients with CR. |
| Miller, [ | |
| Allison [ | Manipulation or mobilization and exercise produces a greater long-term improvement in pain and global perceived effect when compared to no treatment for chronic neck pain, subacute/ chronic neck pain with cervicogenic headache, and chronic neck pain with or without radicular findings. There was insufficient evidence available to draw any conclusions for neck disorder with radicular findings. |
| Leiniger, | |
| Allison [ | The evidence for manipulation or mobilization for cervical spine–related extremity symptoms is very low in quality for all included comparison therapies. Thus, conclusions regarding effectiveness cannot be made |
Systematic reviews including manual therapy in the treatment of patients with CR
| Author, year; included studies using manual therapies | Review conclusion |
|---|---|
| Salt, [ | |
| Allison [ | There is inconclusive evidence for the effectiveness of noninvasive management of cervicobrachial pain. Potential benefits were indicated in the provision of manual therapy and exercise approaches to reduce pain. Traction was no more effective than comparators in reducing pain. Effects of non-invasive management on function and disability were mixed. |
| Thoomes, [ | |
| Persson [ | On the basis of low-level to very low-level evidence, no 1 conservative intervention seemed to be superior or consistently more effective than other interventions. |
Methodological quality assessment of individual studies based on PEDro scores
| Random allocation | Concealed allocation | Baseline comparability | Blind subjects | Blind therapists | Blind assessors | Adequate follow-up | Intention-to-treat analysis | Between-group comparisons | Point estimates and variability | PEDro score | Methodological quality | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allison, [ | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | 5/10 | L |
| Brodin, [ | Y | N | N | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | 4/10 | L |
| Coppieters, [ | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | N | Y | Y | Y | 7/10 | H |
| Howe, [ | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | 7/10 | H |
| Langevin, [ | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | 7/10 | H |
| Nee, [ | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8/10 | H |
| Ragonese, [ | Y | Y | N | N | N | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | 6/10 | L |
| Shin, [ | Y | Y | N | N | N | N | Y | N | Y | N | 4/10 | L |
| Young, [ | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8/10 | H |
Y Yes, N No, H High, L Low
RCTs including manual therapy in the treatment of patients with CR
| Author, year; included patients | Intervention & Control | Study conclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Howe, [ | I: Manipulation and /or injection + NSAID ( | Manual therapy provided immediate significant pain reduction, but at the 1 week follow up there was no between-group difference anymore. |
| Brodin, [ | I 1: Mobilisation ( | Segmental mobilisation was more effective than a placebo or a wait & see policy on the level of pain and range of motion. |
| Allison, [ | I 1: Thoracic & articular mobilisation ( | Manual therapy combined with neurodynamic mobilisation is effective in improving pain intensity, pain quality scores and functional disability levels |
| Coppieters, [ | I: Cervical mobilisation with neurodynamic intent ( | When a cervical dysfunction could be regarded as a cause of the neurogenic disorder or as a contributing factor that impedes natural recovery, a cervical lateral glide mobilisation has positive immediate effects in patients with subacute CR. |
| Shin, [ | I: Chuna Manual Therapy (CMT, | Both CT and CMT reduce the level of pain, but CMT was found to be more effective than CT. |
| Ragonese, [ | I 1: manual therapy ( | A combination of segmental spinal mobilisation and specific motor control exercises is more effective on pain and activity limitations than separate interventions of manual therapy or exercises alone. |
| Young, [ | I: Traction & manual therapy & exercise ( | At the 2 and 4 week follow up there was so significant difference between groups on pain and activity limitations. |
| Nee, [ | I: Cervical mobilisation with neurodynamic intent & peripheral neurodynamic mobilisations ( | At the 2 week follow up the intervention group reported substantial reductions in neck pain, arm pain, and activity limitations. |
| Langevin, [ | I : Cervical mobilisation + specific exercises, both aimed at opening IVF ( | Preliminary results based on the size of the treatment effect, suggest that at the 4 & 8 week follow up, a combination of manual therapy and motor control exercises is more effective on pain and activity limitations than a wait-and-see policy. There is no difference between general mobilisation or mobilisation aimed at opening the IVF. |
I Intervention, C Control, ROM range of motion, ULNT upper limb neural test, IVF intravertebral foramen, GPE Global Perceived Effect, NDI Neck Disability Index, PSFS Patient Specific Functional Scale
Overview of effectiveness of manual therapy treatments
| Intervention | Effectiveness | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Unimodal | ||
| Cervical manipulation as unimodal therapy | More effective at short term follow up (<1 week) on pain than NSAIDs | Low level evidence from 1 study of high methodological quality (Howe, [ |
| Thoracic manipulation as unimodal therapy | Unknown | No RCTs found |
| Cervical mobilisation as unimodal therapy | More effective at immediate follow up than a placebo or a wait&see policy on pain and range of motion. | Very low level evidence from 1 study of low methodological quality (Brodin, [ |
|
| Unknown | No RCTs found |
| Cervical mobilisation with a neurodynamical intent as unimodal intervention | Immediate increase in elbow extension during an ULNT and a decrease in the area of symptom distribution, and pain intensity. | Low level evidence from 1 study of high methodological quality (Coppieters, [ |
| Multimodal | ||
| Combined joint mobilisation and specific (motor control) exercises | More effective at short term follow up (<4 weeks) than either manual therapy or exercise alone or wait & see on pain and activity limitations | Low level evidence from 2 studies, 1 of high (Langevin, [ |
| Multimodal intervention with neurodynamic intent | More effective at short term follow up (<4 weeks) than wait & see policy on pain and global perceived effect | Low level evidence from 1 study with of high methodological quality (Nee, [ |
| Multimodal intervention with combined (neurodynamic, joint, muscle) intent | More effective at short term (3 - 8 weeks) follow up on pain | Low level evidence from 2 studies of low methodological quality (Ragonese, [ |
| Cervical traction combined with manual therapy and exercises | At the short term follow up (<4 weeks) no significant difference between traction or placebo traction | Low level evidence from 1 study of high methodological quality (Young, [ |