CORE Physical Therapy In Omaha Explains…

By Dr. Mark Thomas Rathjen PT DPT CSCS

CORE

Physical Therapy and Sports Performance -owner

17660 Wright St.  9/10

Omaha NE

402-933-4027

 

The Conclusion:

“This systematic review updates the evidence for MT combined or not with exercise and/or usual medical care for different stages of NP and provides recommendations for future studies. Two majors points could be highlighted, the first one is that combining different forms of MT with exercise is better than MT or exercise alone, and the second one is that mobilization need not be applied at the symptomatic level(s) for improvements of NP patients. These both points may have clinical implications for reducing the risk involved with some MT techniques applied to the cervical spine.”

What does this mean?

Manual Therapy is helpful in both short term and long term neck pain issues. Depending on the origin and nature of the pain, manual therapy has differing levels of efficacy.

How does this impact me?

We use manual therapy mobilizations, graston, and dry needling techniques to get our tissues back to base line.

After we reach baseline, what’s next?

Corrective exercises, postural work, and overall stabilization exercises are imperative to keep the tissues from breaking down again and recurrence of injury declines. Being treated by a trained Doctor of Physical Therapy for manual and corrective techniques is vital for a full recovery overall. At CORE Physical Therapy in Omaha, we specialize in an active population and we strive to remain the best Omaha owned physical Therapy Clinic.

 

CORE Physical Therapy works with athletes. We treat them differently than other patients, because they are…

This is what we do, this is who we are. 

At CORE Physical Therapy in Omaha, We specialize in the treatment of athletes. We have worked with athletes for a combined 30 years. CORE was established in 2015 by Dr. Mark and Dr. Claire Rathjen is family owned and operated.

Proud winners of the Omaha Choice awards for 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020,2021

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We are proud to serve the greater Omaha metro area.

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The efficacy of manual therapy and exercise for treating non-specific neck pain: A systematic review

Affiliations

Free PMC article

Abstract

Objective: To review and update the evidence for different forms of manual therapy (MT) and exercise for patients with different stages of non-specific neck pain (NP).

Data sources: MEDLINE, Cochrane-Register-of-Controlled-Trials, PEDro, EMBASE.

Method: A qualitative systematic review covering a period from January 2000 to December 2015 was conducted according to updated-guidelines. Specific inclusion criteria only on RCTs were used; including differentiation according to stages of NP (acute – subacute [ASNP] or chronic [CNP]), as well as sub-classification based on type of MT interventions: MT1 (HVLA manipulation); MT2 (mobilization and/or soft-tissue-techniques); MT3 (MT1 + MT2); and MT4 (Mobilization-with-Movement). In each sub-category, MT could be combined or not with exercise and/or usual medical care.

Results: Initially 121 studies were identified for potential inclusion. Based on qualitative and quantitative evaluation criteria, 23 RCTs were identified for review. Evidence for ASNP: MODERATE-evidence: In favour of (i) MT1 to the cervical spine (Cx) combined with exercises when compared to MT1 to the thoracic spine (Tx) combined with exercises; (ii) MT3 to the Cx and Tx combined with exercise compared to MT2 to the Cx with exercise or compared to usual medical care for pain and satisfaction with care from short to long-term. Evidence for CNP: STRONG-evidence: Of no difference of efficacy between MT2 at the symptomatic Cx level(s) in comparison to MT2 on asymptomatic Cx level(s) for pain and function. MODERATE to STRONG-evidence: In favour of MT1 and MT3 on Cx and Tx with exercise in comparison to exercise or MT alone for pain, function, satisfaction with care and general-health from short to moderate-terms. MODERATE-evidence: In favour (i) of MT1 as compared to MT2 and MT4, all applied to the Cx, for neck mobility, and pain in the very short term; (ii) of MT2 using sof-tissue-techniques to the Cx and Tx or MT3 to the Cx and Tx in comparison to no-treatment in the short-term for pain and disability.

Conclusion: This systematic review updates the evidence for MT combined or not with exercise and/or usual medical care for different stages of NP and provides recommendations for future studies. Two majors points could be highlighted, the first one is that combining different forms of MT with exercise is better than MT or exercise alone, and the second one is that mobilization need not be applied at the symptomatic level(s) for improvements of NP patients. These both points may have clinical implications for reducing the risk involved with some MT techniques applied to the cervical spine.

Keywords: Manual Therapy; evidence based practice; exercise; musculoskeletal manipulation; neck pain; systematic review.