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Active clinical trials for "Low Back Pain"

Results 731-740 of 2244

Case Series Evaluation of Psychodynamic Interpersonal Therapy in Chronic Low Back Pain

Chronic Low Back Pain

Many people in the world have chronic pain; this is pain which lasts more than twelve weeks. Pain can cause people to feel low in mood and change how they feel about themselves and others around them. Therapy for chronic pain does not always work and often people do not have lasting effects from treatment. This study hopes to see if a different therapy, called Psychodynamic Interpersonal Therapy (PIT), can help people with chronic pain. This therapy looks at how we see ourselves and our relationships with others; it aims to help people address personal problems that make it difficult for them to manage their pain. The study aims to show that PIT is a suitable treatment for chronic low back pain and that people will have fewer problems with their mood, how they feel about themselves and their relationships. This study will give people with chronic low back pain eight sessions of PIT and during therapy they will fill in forms about their pain, mood, relationship problems and how they feel about themselves. We will also look at practical things to do with the therapy (e.g. how many sessions people came to, reasons for stopping therapy etc.) and ask people about how they felt about the therapy they had. Three months after the study has finished, people will be asked to fill in the forms again to see if the effects have lasted. This research could help to give people with chronic pain a new and different treatment option which has good and lasting effects.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Core Strengthening for DRA in Postpartum Women

Diastasis RectiPostpartum1 more

This study will prospectively measure the effectiveness of a core strengthening program on reducing the inter-rectus distance (IRD) and abdominal wall muscle contraction in postpartum women with diastasis rectus abdominus (DRA). Additionally, this study will aim to investigate and clarify the association between IRD and low back pain.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Comparison of Biofeedback Tools to Train the Transversus Abdominis Activation in Healthy Subjects...

Low Back Pain

Introduction: Non specific low back pain (NSLBP) is a low back pain (LBP) that cannot be attributable to a known pathology. LBP has prevalence as high as 84%, making it a heavy burden for health services and society worldwide. Furthermore, LBP seems to be more prevalent as the population gets older, and is the cause of severe functional limitations. One of the treatment recommended for LBP is physical therapy. It has been shown that the trunk muscles usually maintain trunk stability by making a sequence of postural adjustment in advance of distal movement to prevent any loss of balance. However, in NSLBP, this motor control adjusting is lacking, and, furthermore, stays so even after the resolution of acute LBP, which could contribute to the recurrence of LBP. Physical therapy therefore addresses NSLBP by rehabilitating the timing and activation of trunk muscle, among other things. The importance of trunk musculature has been highlighted by many studies showing the feedforward contraction of the trunk muscles in anticipation of extremity movement. Those trunk muscles comprise the transversus abdominis (TrA) and lumbar multifidus (LM). Since those muscles create no movement, but rather an increase in abdominal pressure, it is thus often a complex contraction to teach. To help with that teaching, physical therapist may use one of the two feedback tools that exist to teach a TrA contraction, namely the pressure biofeedback unit (PBU) and rehabilitative ultrasound imaging (RUSI). Unfortunately, their efficiency to help with the teaching of TrA contraction is yet to be shown in an elderly population, and few studies compared their efficiency. Furthermore, even though the teaching of the TrA contraction must be followed by a translation of that skill in more functional position such as standing, no studies looked at the effect of the feedback in supine to the skill of TrA contraction in standing. Objective: The principal aim of this study is thus to compare, throughout a healthy population of 60 to 80 years old, the immediate efficiency of adding PBU or RUSI to the TrA contraction teaching in supine. The secondary objectives are as follow: 1) to see if that teaching in supine can be translated by a better contraction of the TrA in standing, and if one of the two tools is superior in doing so and 2) to see if one tool favor a more specific contraction of TrA when compared to the other muscles of the lateral abdominal wall. The hypothesis is that the RUSI will prove superior to the PBU. Method: This will be a single-blinded controlled laboratory study with randomization. The independent variables will be the group of randomization, either PBU or RUSI. The dependent variable will be the TrA contraction. To answer our objectives, forty (40) healthy people aged between 60 and 80 will be recruited. The subjects will be healthy with no current pain and no history of limiting LBP in the past year. Of those, 20 will be women. The randomization will be made in blocks to allow a good balance of the sex throughout the groups. Every subject's TrA contraction (principal outcome) will be measured before and after the intervention (immediate effect) with the RUSI (change of thickness between resting and contracting state) both in supine and standing. The intervention will consist of a 5-minute education on the trunk muscle and their role, a brief teaching of how to contract them properly and the use of the feedback tool used in their group. Will follow a training program of 15 contractions with the feedback tool (PBU vs RUSI). Descriptive analysis will be used to describe the subjects. The TRA activation ratio (AR) and preferential activation ratio (PAR) will be compared after the intervention with Wilcoxon signed rank tests for each subject first. The group's mean will then be compared, first for each age group, then for each feedback tool as a whole with the Wilcoxon rank sum test. Impact: Age and LBP both influence the motor control and feedforward contraction of the trunk muscles. Since NSLBP is highly prevalent throughout the ages and cost a lot for the society, the identification of the best tool to help in teaching the TrA contraction is crucial. This project will provide the first steps to justify a bigger controlled study on NSLBP. Moreover, this project will familiarize the Canadian physical therapist society to the use of RUSI, a tool still seldom used in the clinic in Canada but highly promising.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Examining Effects of Aerobic Exercise on Pain Sensation

Chronic Low Back Pain

By doing this study, researchers hope to learn effects of aerobic exercise on over activated nervous system in people with chronic low back pain.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Which Exercise for Low Back Pain: A Validation Study

Chronic Low Back PainNon Specific Low Back Pain

Dr. Macedo and others involved in the proposed research recently conducted a study that investigated whether simple clinical characteristics could identify patients who benefit more from either motor control exercises or graded activity. Results were statistically significant and clinically relevant demonstrating that a simple questionnaire could help aid the selection of the most appropriate exercise therapy for each individual patient. Therefore, we aim to conduct a randomized controlled trial following a similar approach to the original study to validate in a different sample the results of the effect modification analysis.

Completed1 enrollment criteria

Pulse Ultrasound and Kneading Massage in Non- Specific Chronic Low Back Pain

Non Specific Low Back Pain

Back pain is one of humanity most frequent complains. About nine of ten adults experience back pain at some points in their life and five out of ten working adults have back pain every year. When continued for long period it may constitute a disability which tries the patient of the most stoical individual as well as the doctor called to bring relief to the suffering victim. Kneading massage with topical analgesic is a common practice by physiotherapist especially in Nigeria in the management of low back pain, work has been done to know the efficacy of lofnac gel (topical analgesic) via phonophoresis in the management of low back pain(ojoawo,2015), but the comparison of the efficacy of kneading massage and phonophoresis in the management of low back pain has not been well documented. The purpose of this study therefore, is to compare the efficacy of kneading massage and phonophoresis using lofnac gel in the treatment of non-specific chronic low back pain.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Effect of Physiotherapeutic Interventions on Quality of Life in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain....

Physical TherapyChronic Low Back Pain3 more

The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect on QoL, PI and the AROM° in patients with non-specific chronic low back pain. This after following an episode of 6 weeks 2 times a week physiotherapeutic back rehabilitation according to the 4 times T method by orthopedic disorder ® (4MTOR®). The results in this research will be analyzed and reported. In this study, 7 dependent variables will be independently examined relative to 2 independent variables.

Completed17 enrollment criteria

Visceral Manipulation in Patients With Chronic Low Back Pain

Chronic Low Back Pain

Non-specific chronic low back pain is a common multifactorial condition common to the world population. It is defined as a pain and discomfort located below the ribs and above the gluteal folds that may or may not have referred pain in the leg for more than 12 weeks. Visceral manipulation is a manual therapy technique that aims to normalize mechanical, vascular and neurological dysfunctions of the viscera with the objective of improving its functioning. Visceral dysfunction may potentially activate or exacerbate the symptoms of low back pain in the presence of compromised movements between the internal organs and its connective tissues. There are two ways in which a change in visceral mobility could interfere with low back pain, referred visceral pain and central hypersensitivity. The first occurs due to neural convergence, since there is no spinocortical tract that only sends visceral or somatic afferences, its afferences are crossed in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. The second is that the prolonged and continuous activation of nociceptors, due to the alteration in the mobility of the gastrointestinal and urinary system, can generate central hypersensitivity. Therefore, the investigators hypothesized that through the visceral manipulation the fascial adherences would lyse and the visceral spasms would demise, reducing the peripheral input, thus, lessening pain in the low back.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Physiotherapy Re-education of Pre-activation of the Transverse Abdominis in Patients With Chronic...

Chronic Non-specific Low-Back Pain

Hypothesis: The hypothesis of the study is that the physiotherapeutic re-education of the pre-activation of the transverse abdominal muscle decreases pain intensity in patients with chronic non-specific low-back pain by at least 30% and is more effective than conventional treatment. Aims: the principal aim is to determine the effectiveness of a physiotherapeutic re-education program based on the pre-activation of the transverse abdominal muscle on pain intensity in adult patients diagnosed with chronic non-specific low-back pain compared to conventional treatment in a primary care setting. The secondary aims of the study are to assess the effects of a physiotherapeutic re-education program based on the pre-activation of the transverse abdominal muscle on: (1) disability and limitations for the development of the activities of daily living associated with LBP, (2) transverse abdominal muscle muscle contraction, (3) to assess whether the resistance training parameters applied to older adults are valid for young adults and (4) to determine whether the training protocols used for the cervical spine could be extrapolated to the lumbar spine.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Are Paraspinous Intramuscular Injections of Botulinum Toxin A (BoNT-A) Efficient in the Treatment...

Chronic Low-back Pain

Studying the therapeutic effect of paravertebral injections of BoNT-A (botulinum toxin A) requires further studies to confirm the reported short-term therapeutic effect and to determine potential predictive factors of efficacy.

Completed17 enrollment criteria
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