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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06107127
NA

STOP - START With Rotator Cuff-related Shoulder Pain (RCRSP) Study

Sponsor: Sussex Community NHS Foundation Trust

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Shoulder pain is the third most common type of musculoskeletal (MSK) disorder for which people seek medical care. Roughly 70% of all shoulder pain can be accounted for by one condition, namely rotator ruff-related shoulder pain (RCRSP). Despite limited research it is thought that a lack of pain-free force production of certain shoulder muscles is a key finding in those with RCRSP. Strengthening exercise appears to be an important treatment for RCRSP. However, there remains uncertainty regarding the optimal choice of exercise. It has been suggested essential to target the rotator cuff muscles. Despite this claim, exercise specific to these muscles has not been compared to exercise that specifically avoids significant rotator cuff recruitment. A clearer understanding could result in more effective treatment, and improved exercise adherence. Key questions that this research aims to answer are: 1. Is it important to measure pain-free force when treating people with RCRSP? 2. Is it more effective to target the rotator cuff muscles than not when using exercise to treat RCRSP? To attempt to answer these questions this study will be split into two trials. Patients referred to Sussex Community NHS Foundation trust for treatment of RCRSP will be screened by a Physiotherapist for eligibility and those interested will be asked to give consent to participate. Trial 1 will involve participants attending a one-off 45-minute assessment. Data collection will run over a 6-month period. Participants in Trial 2 will be required to attend a minimum of 10 (or maximum of 12) 45-minute exercise sessions over a 12-16-week period. Trail 2 will last approximately 18 months, with outcomes being recorded when participants finish their exercise sessions and at 6 and 12 months after the date they started the trial.

Official title: 2 RCTS: Investigate the Relationship Between Pain-free Shoulder Abduction and External Rotation Force and Pain and Disability - Assess the Effectiveness of Two Different Forms of Exercise Treatment

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 90 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

110

Start Date

2024-01

Completion Date

2027-10

Last Updated

2023-10-30

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

STOP

Using their symptomatic arm participants will be asked to push against a fixed force dynamometer (hand held force gauge), starting with a low level of effort and gradually increasing their effort stopping either at the point that they start to feel pain or when they feel they have pushed as forcefully as they can.