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Effects of Kinesiotaping vs.Auricular Therapy in Primary Dysmenorrhoea.

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Primary Dysmenorrhoea
Interventions
Procedure: kinesio tape Placebo group
Procedure: Auricular therapy
Procedure: Auricular therapy Placebo group
Procedure: kinesio tape
Registration Number
NCT04400968
Lead Sponsor
University of Extremadura
Brief Summary

This study analyse the effectiveness of auricular therapy vs. kinesio tape treatment for pain management of women with primary dysmenorrhoea.

Detailed Description

Pharmacological treatments are not effective for all women and therefore, the objective of this study was to assess and compare the effectiveness of kinesio tape and auricular therapy to decrease pain and drug intake in women with primary dysmenorrhoea.

A randomized controlled trial was conducted. 114 university women from 18 to 30 years old were randomized to 5 groups: control, kinesio tape, placebo kinesio tape, auricular therapy and placebo auricular therapy. The study was carried out during 4 menstrual cycles of pre-treatment phase, 4 menstrual cycles of treatment phase and two follow up phases (first and third cycle after the treatments were completed). During the treatment phase, the techniques were applied during 72h in each cycle.

The primary outcome measures were: Mean pain intensity of the 3 first days of bleeding, maximum pain intensity, number of painful days and dose of drug intake measured with the Visual Analogue Scale.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
160
Inclusion Criteria
  • Women between 18 and 30 years old affected by primary dysmenorrhoea grade 2 and 3 of Andersch y Milsom classification (Andersch y Milsom, 1982), to have attended gynaecologist consultation for a general revision in the last 2 years, to have menstrual pain, to have regular menstrual cycles of 21 to 38 days, to not have an intrauterine/inter-uterine) device or to be on oral contraceptive treatment.
Exclusion Criteria
  • To have been diagnosed with a condition that could influence menstrual pain perception, to know or have been previously treated with the techniques used in the interventions and pregnancy.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
kinesio tape Placebo groupkinesio tape Placebo groupThe kinesio tape placebo group had the application of three elastic bandages that were shorter than the used in the kinesio tape group. In addition, the tape was adhered with no tension and not place in the treatment area.
Auricular therapy groupAuricular therapyThe auricular therapy group received an intervention based on the bilateral application of 7 adhesive tapes with vaccaria seeds. The points were located with a retractable 250 gr. pressure palpator (Sedatelec®). An experienced health professional trained on acupuncture techniques applied the vaccaria seeds.
Auricular therapy Placebo groupAuricular therapy Placebo groupThe auricular therapy placebo group had adhesive tapes without seeds displaced from the treatment points.
Kinesio tape groupkinesio tapeThe kinesio tape group received an intervention that consisted on the standard application of three elastic bandages. An experienced kinesio tape certified physical therapist applied the taping.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes from the Mean pain intensityMeasured at the end of the menstruation of 4 cycles (28 days) during the pre-treatment and the treatment phase (total of 8 measurements) and at the end of the menstruation of the 9th and 11th cycle (Follow up)

Mean pain intensity of the 3 first days of menstruation measured with the Visual Analogue Scale. Scores range from 0 to 10 where where 0 means no pain and 10 means maximum and excruciating pain.

Changes from the Maximum pain intensityMeasured at the end of the menstruation of 4 cycles (28 days) during the pre-treatment and the treatment phase (total of 8 measurements) and at the end of the menstruation of the 9th and 11th cycle (Follow up)

Maximum pain intensity during menstruation measured with the Visual Analogue Scale. Scores range from 0 to 10 where where 0 means no pain and 10 means maximum and excruciating pain.

Changes from number of painful daysMeasured at the end of the menstruation of 4 cycles (28 days) during the pre-treatment and the treatment phase (total of 8 measurements) and at the end of the menstruation of the 9th and 11th cycle (Follow up)

Count of number of days when the participant experienced pain during the menstruation. A lower number of painful days indicate an improvement

Changes from the dosage of drug intakeMeasured at the end of the menstruation of 4 cycles (28 days) during the pre-treatment and the treatment phase (total of 8 measurements) and at the end of the menstruation of the 9th and 11th cycle (Follow up)

Register of dosage and grug intake of each participant to relief pain during the menstruation. A lower dose of drug intake indicate an improvement.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes from the Length of the menstrual cycleMeasured at the end of the menstruation of 4 cycles (28 days) during the pre-treatment and the treatment phase (total of 8 measurements) and at the end of the menstruation of the 9th and 11th cycle (Follow up)

Count of days that the menstrual cycle lasted for.

Changes from theType of drugMeasured at the end of the menstruation of 4 cycles (28 days) during the pre-treatment and the treatment phase (total of 8 measurements) and at the end of the menstruation of the 9th and 11th cycle (Follow up)

Record of type of medication used by the participants during the menstruation for pain relief.

Changes from the Length of menstruationMeasured at the end of the menstruation of 4 cycles (28 days) during the pre-treatment and the treatment phase (total of 8 measurements) and at the end of the menstruation of the 9th and 11th cycle (Follow up)

Count of days that menstruation lasted for.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Extremadura

🇪🇸

Badajoz, Spain

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