5 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions
A few studies concerning the effects of joint manipulation have shown muscle responses distal to the site of manipulation. The purpose of this study is to determine if pelvic orthopedic blocking, a low force method of manipulating the sacroiliac joint, can have produce changes to cervical spine function.
This study seeks to determine if the correction of a sacroiliac lesion can produce a functional change in cervical spine. Reduction of a sacroiliac joint lesion may alter cervical spine function.
This was a randomized prospective clinical trial conducted from October 1, 2023, to May 15, 2024, at the University Surgery Center in Merced, CA. The project was approved by the MetroWest Medical Center Institutional Review Board (IRB). Patients in each procedure group were categorized into groups and randomly distributed into four sub-groups based on the syringe size used (5ml, 10ml, 20ml, 30ml). A medical grade force sensor device was used to collect the necessary real-time syringe force data. An analysis of variance (ANOVA), and pairwise t test were used to make comparisons between means and determine statistical significance.
Chronic pain following surgical stabilization of a pelvic fracture is very prominent and can have a major affect on a patient's quality of life. Persistent pain after radiographic evidence of fracture union commonly leads to implant removal. But, the routine removal of orthopaedic fixation devices after fracture healing remains an issue of debate.
The purpose of this study is to determine if interventions applied at a distant site, lumbopelvic region (manipulation and TENS), have a similar effect as interventions applied locally at the knee (TENS) on quadriceps force output and activation as well as reports of pain during common exercises in individuals with PFPS.