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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07550933
NA

Efficacy of Dry Needling for Releasing the Sacrotuberous Ligament in Patients With Sacroiliac Joint Dysfunctions

Sponsor: University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Science

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Sacroiliac joint dysfunction is a common source of low back and pelvic pain, often caused by improper load transfer through the pelvis. The sacrotuberous ligament stabilises the sacroiliac joint by limiting sacral nutation and supporting posterior pelvic structures. The sacroiliac joint connects the sacrum to the ischial tuberosity and integrates with muscles like the gluteus maximus and biceps femoris. Tightness, dysfunction, or pain in the sacrotuberous ligament can exacerbate sacroiliac joint dysfunction by altering mechanics. Dry needling is increasingly used for myofascial pain and muscle dysfunction. Applying dry needling to release ligamentous structures is novel and may improve the biomechanics of the sacroiliac joint by alleviating tension in the sacrotuberous ligament. The aim of the study is to investigate the efficacy of dry needling for releasing the sacrotuberous ligament in patients with sacroiliac joint dysfunctions on pain intensity, functional disability, and biomechanical changes, along with routine physical therapy compared to sham dry needling and routine physical therapy.

Official title: Efficacy of Dry Needling for Releasing the Sacrotuberous Ligament on Pain Intensity, Functional Disability, and Biomechanical Changes in Patients With Sacroiliac Joint Dysfunctions

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

40 Years - 65 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

60

Start Date

2026-04

Completion Date

2026-11

Last Updated

2026-04-24

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

Group A: Dry Needling

In Group A, Dry needling of the STL will be performed with the patient in a prone position, supported with a pillow under the abdomen to minimize lumbar lordosis. After antiseptic skin preparation and adherence to infection-control protocols, sterile, single-use filiform needles (0.25-0.30 mm gauge, 50-75 mm length depending on patient body habitus) will be applied. Anatomical landmarks, including the posterior superior iliac spine, sacrum (S3-S5), and ischial tuberosity, will be palpated to identify the taut band of the ligament. Needle insertion will be carried out obliquely or slightly medially at a 30-45° angle, with a penetration depth of approximately 4-6 cm, adjusted according to individual anatomy and confirmed where possible by ultrasound guidance to enhance precision and safety. One to two needles will be inserted per symptomatic side, with bilateral treatment applied when indicated. Each needle will be retained for 30-60 seconds with light pistoning if required

OTHER

Group B: Sham Dry Needling

Identify anatomical landmarks (PSIS, ischial tuberosity, S3-S5) and palpate the STL region exactly as in active DN. Place the introducer tube against the skin at the planned point(s); tap the top of the (blunt/retractable) needle as if inserting. For a fixed blunt-needle sham: insert the guide tube, then tap a blunt needle that is fixed inside the tube so it does not penetrate the skin (the subject feels pressure and tapping). For a retractable needle (Streitberger/Park): perform the same steps; the needle telescopes into handle on contact so skin is not pierced. Simulate identical manual manoeuvres (light pistoning or gentle manipulation of the introducer) for the same time as active DN (e.g., 30-60 sec). If the active protocol uses ultrasound guidance, simulate ultrasound probe contact and display but do not show images to the patient. Apply similar post-procedure care (pressure, dressing if used, reassurance).

Locations (1)

CMH Medical College and IOD, Lahore, Pakistan

Lahore, Punjab Province, Pakistan