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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Effect of Soft Tissue Techniques on Headache Impact, Disability, and Quality of Life in Migraine Sufferers: A Pilot Study
Cristina Nova-redondoDeborah FallaMaria-arantzazu Ruescas-nicolauJosep C Benítez-martínezGemma Victoria Espí-lópezPierre-michel Dugaillysubject
AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentMigraine DisordersHeadache impactPsychological interventionPilot ProjectsYoung Adult03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineQuality of lifeHumansMedicineMyofascial trigger point030222 orthopedicsControl treatmentbusiness.industryHeadacheSoft tissueMiddle AgedManipulation Osteopathicmedicine.diseaseComplementary and alternative medicineMigraineQuality of LifePhysical therapyFemaleManual therapybusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgerydescription
To determine the efficacy of suboccipital inhibitory techniques in people with migraine compared with a control treatment based on myofascial trigger point (MTrP) therapy and stretching.A randomized, double-blind controlled pilot trial was conducted.University research laboratory.Forty-six adults diagnosed with migraine with over 6 months duration.Participants were randomized to receive either combined MTrP therapy and stretching (control group) or the control treatment plus suboccipital soft tissue inhibition (experimental group). Treatment was applied on four occasions over 8 weeks (one every 15 days), with a duration of 30 minutes per session in the experimental group and 20 min in the control group.The impact of headache was assessed with the Headache Impact Test (HIT-6), disability by the migraine disability assessment (MIDAS), and quality of life by the Short Form Health Survey (SF-36). Both groups were assessed at baseline and 1 week immediately after the end of treatment.The amount of change of the HIT-6 score and MIDAS scores were significantly different between groups (p 0.05), although the SF-36 scores were not. The change in the HIT-6 score and MIDAS scores was greater in the experimental group. Both groups showed a reduction on the HIT-6 score (p 0.001), MIDAS scores (p 0.05), and SF-36 physical subscale, whereas the SF-36 mental subscale improved only in the experimental group (p 0.001).Soft tissue techniques based on MTrP therapy and stretching were helpful for improving certain aspects of migraine, such as the impact and disability caused by the headache, and the frequency and intensity of headache; however, when combined with suboccipital soft tissue inhibition, the treatment effect was larger.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-11-01 | The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine |