| Literature DB >> 33183274 |
Rafael Baeske1,2, Toby Hall3, Marcelo Faria Silva4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rotator cuff related pain (RCRP) is one of the most common sources of musculoskeletal shoulder pain affecting the general population. Conservative treatment, in the form of exercise, is considered the first line approach, nonetheless, improvements seem to be modest. One therapeutic modality that might be an adjunct to the treatment of this condition is mobilisation with movement (MWM). MWM is a pain-free manual procedure that targets restricted and painful movements, commonly seen in patients with RCRP. The purpose of clinical trial is to determine whether MWM with exercise has benefits over sham MWM with exercise in RCRP.Entities:
Keywords: Exercise; Mobilisation with movement; Musculoskeletal manipulations; Rotator cuff; Shoulder pain
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33183274 PMCID: PMC7663889 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-020-03765-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Fig. 1Recruitment process and flow through study
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| 1. Age 18–65 years. | 1. Shoulder pain following a traumatic event. |
| 2. Unilateral shoulder pain of atraumatic origin. | 2. History and clinical presentation compatible with complete rotator cuff and/or biceps brachii rupture. |
| 3. Scoring at least 3 out of 10 on a numeric pain rating scale. | 3. Adhesive capsulitis. |
| 4. Symptoms lasting more than 6 weeks. | 4. History of dislocation. |
| 5. Pain on active shoulder movement. | 5. Glenohumeral osteoarthritis. |
| 6. Pain provoked by at least three of the following tests: Hawkins-Kennedy, Neer, Painful arc, Empty/full can and Resisted external rotation. | 6. Cancer |
| 7. Patients referred by a shoulder specialist with diagnosis of rotator cuff injury (tendinitis/tendinosis), subacromial impingement syndrome, bursitis, subacromial pain, that fulfill the criteria above. | 7. Systemic, local or auto-immune inflammatory conditions. |
| 8. Previous shoulder or neck surgery or fracture. | |
| 9. Familiar pain provoked by neck movements. | |
| 10. Presence of radicular signs. | |
| 11. Use of corticosteroids over the past six months. | |
| 12. Diagnosis of fibromyalgia. | |
| 13. Clinical depression. | |
| 14. Participants under treament for his/her shoulder condition over the last 3 months. |
Fig. 2Schedule of enrolment, interventions, and assessments. 1) Shoulder pain and disability index; 2) Numeric pain rating scale; 3) Active range of motion; 4) Pain pressure threshold
Trial registration data set
| Category | Information |
|---|---|
| Primary registry and trial identifying number | |
| Date of registration in primary registry | November, 2019 |
| Ethics Committee number | UFCSPA Ethics Committee CAEE: 3.528.946 |
| Source(s) of monetary or material support | Self-funded |
| Contact for public queries | Rafael Baeske, rbaeske@yahoo.com |
| Contact for scientific queries | Rafael Baeske, rbaeske@yahoo.com |
| Public title | The use of MWM and exercises in shoulder pain. |
| Scientific title | The inclusion of Mobilisation with Movement to a standard exercise programme for patients with rotator cuff related pain a randomised, placebo-controlled protocol trial. |
| Countries of recruitment | Brazil |
| Health condition and problem studied | Shoulder pain related to rotator cuff |
| Intervention | Mobilisation with movement |
| Comparator | Sham mobilisation with movement |
| Key inclusion and exclusion criteria | Age: 18–65 years;Inclusion criteria: ≥6 weeks shoulder pain of atraumatic origin; pain on movement. Exclusion criteria: specific shoulder conditions (fracture, dislocation, arthritis, adhesive capsulitis, cancer, previous surgery, radicular signs). |
| Study type | Interventional Allocation: randomised; sham-controlled clinical trial with parallel groups; double-blind. |
| Date of first enrolment | March, 2020 |
| Target sample size | 70 |
| Recruitment status | Recruiting |
| Primary outcome(s) | Function and pain |
| Key secondary outcome(s) | Active range of motion, pain pressure threshold, global perceived effect, self-efficacy and expectations. |