The prevalence of non-specific neck pain is 12.1 / 1000 patients / year. Their support is most often based on analgesics combined with physical therapy. More recently authors have advocated the use of self-rehabilitation, that is to say, the use by the patient himself of physiotherapy exercises to perform at home regularly. However, if there are currently many studies on the effectiveness of self-rehabilitation for low back pain, there are few data on neck pain. In this context we have chosen to implement a prospective, randomized study, on the effectiveness of self-rehabilitation in patients with chronic neck pain.
Patients included in the "self-rehabilitation" group will, in addition to conventional physiotherapy, to visit two training sessions in self-rehabilitation at the hospital. Each patient received a booklet including advices to perform different kinds of exercises at home. The patients learn the exercises with the help of the physiotherapist and have to traine daily at home. Patients will have to answer questionnaires about their pain at follow-usual consultations of their disease at 2 months and 4 months after the start physical therapy and during a phone call after 1 year.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
106
2 training sessions in self-rehabilitation at the hospital and then a self-rehabilitation / day session + 14 physiotherapy sessions (2 by week)
14 physiotherapy sessions (2 by week)
CHU de SAINT-ETIENNE
Saint-Etienne, France
Cervical pain
Verbal Scale Digital (EVN) cervical pain average 11 points (from 0-10) in the last week
Time frame: 2 months
cervical pain
Verbal Scale Digital (EVN) cervical pain average 11 points (from 0-10) in the last week
Time frame: 1 year
cervical pain
Verbal Scale Digital (EVN) cervical pain average 11 points (from 0-10) in the last week
Time frame: 4 months
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