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New Therapeutic Interventions and Imaging Techniques for Prolonged Shoulder Disorders
Sponsor: University of Oulu
Summary
The RESSPECT study compares three types of physical therapy for adults aged 20-60 years with prolonged shoulder disorders, aiming to find better ways to help people recover and improve daily function. The study also examines modern imaging tests (X-ray, ultrasound, MRI) to see how well imaging findings match real symptoms, and tests new imaging technologies that may provide a more accurate diagnosis. The study improves future shoulder pain care by addressing both physical and psychological factors and advancing diagnostic imaging. Participants are randomly assigned to one of three groups: 1. Routine physical therapy (usual occupational care), 2. Tendon-Specific Exercise Program (TSEP): targeted exercises to build shoulder strength and 3. Psychologically Informed Physical Therapy (PIPT): combining physical rehabilitation with advice and emotional support. All participants get complete imaging of both shoulders and a clinical evaluation by a physiotherapist at the start of the study. Complete imaging is also done for all participants after twelve months. Surveys about pain, movement, mood, sleep, and quality of life are collected electronically at the start of the study, and at three, six, twelve, and 36 months. The main outcome is how well each person resumes everyday activities affected by shoulder pain (Patient-Specific Functional Scale, PSFS). Group 1 will receive routine occupationally led physiotherapy, and groups 2 and 3 will receive five physiotherapist-guided sessions during the first six month-period. Advanced imaging techniques will deployed in conjunction with standard imaging methods and compared to see whether new technologies help explain symptoms or guide care. To join, participants must have had prolonged shoulder disorders in one shoulder for at least four consecutive weeks, be employed or self-employed, and be willing to take part in rehabilitation activities. Certain medical conditions, prior surgery, and pregnancy are exclusion criteria. Inclusion and exclusion criteria are systematically reviewed in a structured phone interview at the start of the study. Baseline imaging is also viewed preliminarily for certain conditions which would require urgent medical care. If necessary, participants are contacted, informed and subsequently excluded from the study. The trial takes place at Oulu University Hospital, Finland. Approximately 300 people are recruited to the study via local ads. Informed consent is required for the study, and participants can withdraw at any time. All procedures meet ethical standards. This study will help determine: 1. Which therapy works best overall 2. Whether some people benefit more from certain therapies 3. If imaging findings help predict outcomes or aid treatment decisions 4. Whether new imaging technology improves diagnosis
Official title: A Single-center, Randomized, Parallel-group Study to Compare the Efficacy of Psychologically Informed Physical Therapy, Tendon-Specific Exercise Program and Routine Physical Therapy in Prolonged Unilateral Shoulder Pain: RESSPECT Study
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
20 Years - 60 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
300
Start Date
2026-01
Completion Date
2029-01
Last Updated
2025-11-19
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Tendon-Specific Exercise Program (TSEP)
The aims of the TSEP are to improve RC muscle strength and increase tendon stiffness. The principles of exercise intervention are based on High-Loading Tendon Exercise (HLTE) and Heavy Slow Resistance (HSR) Training programs, and the Pain Monitoring Model (PMM).
Psychologically Informed Physical Therapy (PIPT)
The aims of PIPT are biopsychosocial framework, patient-centered care and communication, good patient-therapist relationship, and consideration of patient's beliefs, fears and attitudes, behavior change, and guided self-management.
Occupational health care led physiotherapy
Subjects will be advised to contact the occupational health care to receive routine physiotherapy for their shoulder symptoms.
Locations (1)
Oulu University Hospital
Oulu, Finland