The Effect of Myofascial Release in Patients With Cervicogenic Headache (RCT)
Cervicogenic Headache
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Cervicogenic Headache focused on measuring myofascial release, cervicogenic headache, pain intensity, exercise therapy, pressure pain threshold
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Neck pain with referring unilateral pain to sub-occipital region.
- The pain and limitation of C1-C2 rotation with craniocervical FRT.
- Intensifying of Headache by manual pressure to upper cervical muscles and joints.
- Headache frequency of at least one per week a period of previous 6 months
Exclusion Criteria:
- Bilateral headaches (typifying tension headache).
- Intolerance to craniocervical FRT.
- Presence of autonomic system symptoms like vertigo, dizziness and visual impairment.
- Severe specific neck pain as disk herniation, canal stenosis and cervical spondylosis.
- Any condition that might contraindicate myofascial release technique in upper cervical region.
- Physiotherapy for headache in the previous 6 months.
Sites / Locations
- University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Experimental
Myofascial release technique
conventional exercise therapy
Subjects lied down in supine with knee flexion. Therapist seated on a stool at the head of the table. Elbows and supinated forearms on the table. Asked the client to lift their head off the table. Position the tips of the first three fingers into the soft tissue immediately inferior to the arc of atlas. The fingers are stabilized in a flexed position - around 45° at the MP and PIP joints. The subject is asked to rest their head back down so the fingertips are in the sub-occipital soft tissues and the finger pads rest firmly against the inferior aspect of the atlas. Once the position is perceived to be comfortable, a series of soft tissue responses will occur, characterized by local softening sensations followed by an increase in the weight of the head.
Craniocervical flexion exercises, performed in supine lying, aimed to target the deep neck flexor muscles. Then they trained to be able to hold progressively increasing ranges of craniocervical flexion using feedback from an airfilled pressure sensor placed behind the neck. The muscles of the scapula, particularly the serratus anterior and lower trapezius, were trained using inner range holding exercises of scapular adduction and retraction, practiced initially in the prone lying position. The subjects were trained to sit with a natural lumbar lordosis while gently adducting and retracting their scapulas and gently flexed their cranio-cervical spine to facilitate the deep neck flexors.