Postural and Clinical Outcomes of SNAGs Treatment in Cervicogenic Dizziness Patients: a Randomised Controlled Trial
- Conditions
- RehabilitationCervicogenic Dizziness
- Interventions
- Procedure: SNAGs TreatmentProcedure: Sham Laser Treatment
- Registration Number
- NCT04347148
- Lead Sponsor
- Uniter Onlus
- Brief Summary
Previous works demonstrated the relationship between postural disturbances and reduction in cervical range of motion (CROM) in patients suffering from cervicogenic dizziness (CGD). Since sustained natural apophyseal glides (SNAGs) have been proposed as an effective treatment, the aim of the present study was to evaluate how clinical measures could be affected in patients with cervicogenic dizziness undergoing SNAGs.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 80
-
accepted criteria will be operationalized to achieve the clinical suspicion of cervicogenic dizziness as following:
- Exclusion of these differential diagnoses: a. Migrainous vertigo b. Vertigo of central origin c. Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) d. Meniere disease e. Vestibular neuritis f. Vertigo induced by drugs g. Psychogenic vertigo (anxiety and/or panic disorder and/or phobia) h. Orthostatic hypotension
- presence of a subjective feeling of dizziness associated with pain, movement, rigidity, or certain positions of the neck at least from 3 months;
- Cervical pain, trauma, and/or disease
- If from traumatic origin, there has to be a temporal proximity between the onset of dizziness and the neck injury.
Diagnosis is positive if criteria 1 to 3 are fulfilled. As for criterion 2, dizziness had to occur during the same period than neck pain occurred and dizziness had to be proportional to the severity of the neck pain that generally fluctuates in time.
Criterion 4 addresses cervicogenic dizziness occurring after a neck trauma
- presence of trauma or recent surgery in the head, face, neck, or chest;
- an otorhinolaryngological diagnosis of central or peripheral vertigo
- receiving physiotherapy during the study period.
- History, physical examination and a thorough clinical otoneurological examination will be devised to exclude extracervical causes of dizziness.
- In order to exclude vestibular hypofunction, video Head Impulse Test - and the technique proposed in previous studies will be used to study the vestibulo-ocular reflex.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description SNAGs treatment SNAGs Treatment cervicogenic patients will undergo SNAGs treatment. Based on personal history, the offending active cervical movement (i.e. the movement predominantly causing dizziness) will be identified and treatment direction will be determined. As suggested, the active movement to most likely cause dizziness is cervical extension, though also rotation or flexion will be shown to provoke it. With the participant in an upright sitting position, a skilled physiotherapist (blinded to the allocation) will apply a sustained passive accessory movement (glide) while the participant will be asked to move actively as allowed by his/her physiological range in the direction producing their symptoms. This procedure will be repeated six times. Detuned Laser Sham Laser Treatment cervicogenic patients will receive a sham treatment, carried out by the another skilled therapist (blinded to the allocation) and consisting in exposition to a detuned laser. A laser - deactivated by the manufacturer in order to produce no effective emission - will appear to operate normally, emitting a light signal and a beeping sound. Such procedure - which was shown to not activate somatosensory receptors and to have a very strong placebo effect - will be used for six applications, lasting 20 seconds, on various sites on the upper cervical spine, at a distance of 0.5-1cm from the skin.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Cervical Spine Movements one month A cervical range of motion (CROM) goniometer, which has been shown to be a reliable tool with good validity, will be used to measure (in degrees) cervical spine movements. Active flexion, extension, left and right rotation, and left and right lateral flexion will be measured three times and then averaged. Low levels of outcomes indicate worse performances. No specific reference ranges are given in literature.
Balance Test one month Study of the surface of the ellipse of confidence (calculated in mm) by means of static posturography platform will be used to assess the sway of the posture. Low levels of outcomes indicate better performances. No specific reference ranges are given in literature.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Disability of the Neck one month Level of neck spine disability will be assessed by means of Neck Disability Index (NDI). This self-report questionnaire has a single-factor structure comprising 10 items which assess different activities of daily living on a 6-point Likert-type scale (ranging from 0 to 5). Higher absolute scores indicate more severe pain and greater disability
Pain of the Neck one month Neck Pain Intensity (NPI) will be evaluated with the visual analogue scale for pain. This self-report reliable tool consists of a 100-mm horizontal line between the extremes 'no pain' (left) and 'worst imaginable pain' (right).
Self-report dizziness one month The Italian Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI) wil be used to assess the self-report dizziness handicap. It consists of 25 questions designed to assess a patient's functional (nine questions), emotional (nine questions), and physical (seven questions) limitations; absolute scores range from 0 to 100, with moderate and severe disability usually associated with scores above 30 and 60, respectively
Anxiety and Depression one month Anxiety and depression will be evaluated with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). This self-administered questionnaire contains 14 items, rated on a 4-point Likert type scale (from 0 to 3 points). The tool includes 2 subscales of 7 items that assess anxiety and depression. Higher absolute scores indicate higher levels of anxiety and depression in the 2 subscales, respectively
Fear of Movement one month Fear of movement will be quantified with the Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK-17), a 17 item self-report questionnaire in which each question is scored using a 4-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 4 (strongly agree); 4 items (4, 8, 12, and 16) are negatively worded and reverse scored. Higher absoute scores indicate a higher degree of kinesiophobia
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
UNITER ONLUS for balance and rehabilitation research
🇮🇹Guidonia, Rome, Italy