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Manipulation or mobilisation for neck pain: A...
Journal article

Manipulation or mobilisation for neck pain: A Cochrane Review

Abstract

Manipulation and mobilisation are often used, either alone or combined with other treatment approaches, to treat neck pain. This review assesses if manipulation or mobilisation improves pain, function/disability, patient satisfaction, quality of life (QoL), and global perceived effect (GPE) in adults experiencing neck pain with or without cervicogenic headache or radicular findings. A computerised search was performed in July 2009. Randomised trials investigating manipulation or mobilisation for neck pain were included. Two or more authors independently selected studies, abstracted data, and assessed methodological quality. Pooled relative risk (pRR) and standardised mean differences (pSMD) were calculated. 33% of 27 trials had a low risk of bias. Moderate quality evidence showed cervical manipulation and mobilisation produced similar effects on pain, function and patient satisfaction at intermediate-term follow-up. Low quality evidence suggested cervical manipulation may provide greater short-term pain relief than a control (pSMD -0.90 (95%CI: -1.78 to -0.02)). Low quality evidence also supported thoracic manipulation for pain reduction (NNT 7; 46.6% treatment advantage) and increased function (NNT 5; 40.6% treatment advantage) in acute pain and immediate pain reduction in chronic neck pain (NNT 5; 29% treatment advantage). Optimal technique and dose need to be determined.

Authors

Gross A; Miller J; D’Sylva J; Burnie SJ; Goldsmith CH; Graham N; Haines T; Brønfort G; Hoving JL; COG

Journal

Musculoskeletal Science and Practice, Vol. 15, No. 4, pp. 315–333

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

August 1, 2010

DOI

10.1016/j.math.2010.04.002

ISSN

1684-6753

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