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Low-Level Laser Therapy for Osgood-Schlatter or Sever Pain in Youth Athletes
Sponsor: Medical University of Gdansk
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if low-level laser therapy (also called photobiomodulation) works to treat knee or heel pain in physically active children and adolescents with Osgood-Schlatter disease or Sever disease. It will also learn about the safety of this treatment. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Does low-level laser therapy lower pain more than a sham (placebo) laser treatment? 2. Does low-level laser therapy improve daily and sport-related function more than a sham laser treatment? 3. What medical problems, if any, do participants have during the study? Researchers will compare active low-level laser therapy to a sham (placebo) laser treatment. The sham treatment looks and feels the same but does not deliver therapeutic light. This comparison will show whether the laser therapy works better than placebo. Participants will: * Complete screening and a baseline visit * Be randomly assigned to active laser therapy or sham laser therapy * Receive a series of treatment sessions over \[2 weeks\] * Answer short questionnaires about pain and function at baseline and follow-up visits * Have ultrasound imaging and/or provide blood or urine samples for research measurements Both participants and the study team who assess outcomes will not know which treatment group each participant is in until the study ends.
Official title: Effect of Low-Level Laser Photobiomodulation on Pain, Function, Ultrasound Findings, and Biochemical Markers in Youth Athletes With Osgood-Schlatter Disease or Sever Disease: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Sham-Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
10 Years - 17 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
30
Start Date
2026-03-01
Completion Date
2029-02-01
Last Updated
2026-03-17
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Photobiomodulation (Low-Level Laser Therapy)
Active photobiomodulation (low-level laser therapy) delivered using a laser device applied to the symptomatic apophyseal region (tibial tubercle for Osgood-Schlatter-type pain and/or calcaneal region for Sever-type pain). Sessions will be provided according to a standardized schedule and preset device parameters (wavelength/output/dose and application time) specified in the protocol.
Sham Photobiomodulation (Sham Laser Treatment)
Sham (placebo) photobiomodulation delivered with an identical device appearance and treatment routine (positioning, contact, and session duration) but without delivery of therapeutic light. The sham procedure is intended to maintain participant blinding and matches the active intervention schedule.
Locations (1)
Department of Immunobiology and Environment Microbiology, Debinki 7
Gdansk, Pomeranian, Poland