Abstract

BackgroundRecurrent or persistent neck pain affects a vast number of people globally, leading to reduced quality of life and high societal costs. Clinically, it is a difficult condition to manage, and treatment effect sizes are often moderate at best. Activity and manual therapy are first-line treatment options in current guidelines. We aimed to investigate the combination of home stretching exercises and spinal manipulative therapy in a multicentre randomized controlled clinical trial, carried out in multidiscipline ary primary care clinics.MethodsThe treatment modalities utilized were spinal manipulative therapy and home stretching exercises compared to home stretching exercises alone. Both groups received 4 treatments for 2 weeks. The primary outcome was pain, where the subjective pain experience was investigated by assessing pain intensity (NRS − 11) and the quality of pain (McGill Pain Questionnaire). Neck disability and health status were secondary outcomes, measured using the Neck Disability Indexthe EQ-5D, respectively. One hundred thirty-one adult subjects were randomized to one of the two treatment groups. All subjects had experienced persistent or recurrent neck pain the previous 6 months and were blinded to the other group intervention. The clinicians provided treatment for subjects in both group and could not be blinded. The researchers collecting data were blinded to treatment allocation, as was the statistician performing data analyses. An intention-to-treat analysis was used.ResultsSixty-six subjects were randomized to the intervention group, and sixty-five to the control group. For NRS − 11, a B-coefficient of − 0,01 was seen, indication a 0,01 improvement for the intervention group in relation to the control group at each time point with a p-value of 0,305. There were no statistically significant differences between groups for any of the outcome measures.ConclusionBased on the current findings, there is no additional treatment effect from adding spinal manipulative therapy to neck stretching exercises over 2 weeks for patients with persistent or recurrent neck pain.Trial registrationThe trial was registered 03/07/2018 at ClinicalTrials.gov, registration number: NCT03576846.

Highlights

  • Recurrent or persistent neck pain affects a vast number of people globally, leading to reduced quality of life and high societal costs

  • Persistent Neck pain (NP) falls under the category of chronic primary pain [4], defined in the ICD-11 as “pain ... that persists or recurs for longer than three months and is associated with significant emotional distress or significant functional disability and that cannot be better explained by another chronic pain condition” [4]

  • This study aims to determine the effects of a two-week treatment series consisting of i) home stretching exercises and spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) versus ii) home stretching exercises alone on pain and disability in a population of patients with persistent or recurrent NP

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Summary

Introduction

Recurrent or persistent neck pain affects a vast number of people globally, leading to reduced quality of life and high societal costs. Its prevalence will likely rise due to an expected increase of such conditions in low-income and middle-income countries in the coming years [2] and a longer average life span worldwide [3]. Persistent or recurrent ( described as “chronic”) pain is a prevalent condition, affecting 20% of the population globally [4, 5]. That persists or recurs for longer than three months and is associated with significant emotional distress or significant functional disability (interference with activities of daily life and participation in social roles) and that cannot be better explained by another chronic pain condition” [4]. The consensus definition is that persistent or recurrent NP is located in the area of the neck, is constant or recurrent, with a minimum duration of 3 months [13,14,15]

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