Spinal manipulation does not improve short-term pain and function in persons with painful shoulder: a systematic review with meta-analysis.

Disability evaluation musculoskeletal manipulations physical therapy modalities recovery of function shoulder pain

Journal

Disability and rehabilitation
ISSN: 1464-5165
Titre abrégé: Disabil Rehabil
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9207179

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
29 Feb 2024
Historique:
medline: 29 2 2024
pubmed: 29 2 2024
entrez: 29 2 2024
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

To investigate the benefit of spinal high-velocity low-amplitude thrust (HVLAT) in improving pain and disability in persons with painful shoulder as primary outcomes. Function, quality of life, persons (and clinicians) satisfaction, adverse events rate, and time for recovery were secondary outcomes. A systematic review with meta-analysis was conducted and MEDLINE, CENTRAL, Embase, and PEDro until 20 September 2023 were investigated. Two thousand eight hundred and ninety-nine records were retrieved and nine studies were included. Risk of bias of included studies was assessed through the Revised Cochrane risk-of-bias tool. The certainty of evidence of the pooled results was graded with GRADE approach. The analysis included nine studies (441 persons). The pooled results showed non-significant differences between HVLAT versus sham in pain at pre-post follow-up (MD -0.13, 95% confidence interval (CI) -0.60; 0.35; HVLAT was not more effective than sham in improving pain and function at pre-post and at <4 days follow-up. When used as an "add-on technique", HVLAT did not improve pain nor disability. High-velocity low-amplitude thrust (HVLAT) manipulation is no more effective than sham in improving shoulder pain at pre-post follow-up.Clinician should not be recommended to deliver HVLAT manipulation in subjects with painful shoulder with the purpose of reducing pain intensity.However, HVLAT manipulation should be considered within a multimodal approach to address function in painful shoulder subjects.

Autres résumés

Type: plain-language-summary (eng)
High-velocity low-amplitude thrust (HVLAT) manipulation is no more effective than sham in improving shoulder pain at pre-post follow-up.Clinician should not be recommended to deliver HVLAT manipulation in subjects with painful shoulder with the purpose of reducing pain intensity.However, HVLAT manipulation should be considered within a multimodal approach to address function in painful shoulder subjects.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38420943
doi: 10.1080/09638288.2024.2322025
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1-18

Auteurs

Fabrizio Brindisino (F)

Department of Medicine and Health Science "Vincenzo Tiberio", University of Molise c/o Cardarelli Hospital, C/da Tappino, Campobasso, Italy.

Fabiola Garzonio (F)

Department of Medicine and Health Science "Vincenzo Tiberio", University of Molise c/o Cardarelli Hospital, C/da Tappino, Campobasso, Italy.

Giuseppe Giovannico (G)

Department of Medicine and Health Science "Vincenzo Tiberio", University of Molise c/o Cardarelli Hospital, C/da Tappino, Campobasso, Italy.

Francesco Isaia (F)

Isaia Physical Therapy Private Practice, Marsala, Italy.

Fabio Fiorentino (F)

Department of Medicine and Health Science "Vincenzo Tiberio", University of Molise c/o Cardarelli Hospital, C/da Tappino, Campobasso, Italy.

Claudia Cavaggion (C)

Department of Rehabilitation Sciences and Physiotherapy (REVAKI), Research Group MOVANT, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium.

Firas Mourad (F)

Department of Physiotherapy, LUNEX International University of Health, Exercise and Sports, Differdange, Luxembourg.
Luxembourg Health & Sport Sciences Research Institute A.s.b.l., Differdange, Luxembourg.

Tiziano Innocenti (T)

Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
GIMBE Foundation, Bologna, Italy.

Classifications MeSH