Manual
Therapy, Physical Therapy, or Continued Care by a
General Practitioner for Patients with Neck Pain : A
Randomized, Controlled Trial
Jan Lucas Hoving,
PT, PhD; Bart W. Koes, PhD;
Henrica C.W. de Vet, PhD; Danielle A.W.M.
van der Windt, PhD; Willem J.J. Assendelft,
MD, PhD; Henk van Mameren, MD, PhD;
Walter L.J.M. Devillé, MD, PhD; Jan
J.M. Pool, PT; Rob J.P.M Scholten, MD, PhD;
and Lex M. Bouter, PhD
Annals of Internal
Medicine,
21 May 2002
Background: Neck pain is a
common problem, but the effectiveness of
frequently applied conservative therapies has never been
directly compared.
Objective: To
determine the effectiveness of manual therapy,
physical therapy, and continued care by a general
practitioner.
Design: Randomized,
controlled trial.
Setting: Outpatient
care setting in the Netherlands.
Patients: 183 patients, 18
to 70 years of age, who had had nonspecific
neck pain for at least 2 weeks.
Intervention: 6
weeks of manual therapy (specific mobilization
techniques) once per week, physical therapy (exercise
therapy) twice per week, or continued care by
a general practitioner (analgesics,
counseling, and education).
Measurements:
Treatment was considered successful if the patient
reported being "completely recovered" or "much
improved" on an ordinal six-point scale.
Physical dysfunction, pain intensity, and
disability were also measured.
Results: At 7 weeks,
the success rates were 68.3% for manual
therapy, 50.8% for physical therapy, and 35.9% for
continued care. Statistically significant
differences in pain intensity with manual
therapy compared with continued care or physical
therapy ranged from 0.9 to 1.5 on a scale of 0 to
10. Disability scores also favored manual
therapy, but the differences among groups
were small. Manual therapy scored consistently better
than the other two interventions on most outcome
measures. Physical therapy scored better than
continued care on some outcome measures, but
the differences were not statistically significant.
Conclusion: In
daily practice, manual therapy is a favorable
treatment option for patients with neck pain compared
with physical therapy or continued care by a
general practitioner. |