An investigation into the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain

Mini-dissertation in partial compliance with the requirements for the Masters Degree in Technology: Chiropractic, in the Department of Chiropractic at the Durban University of Technology, 2009 === The aim of this study was to investigate the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative...

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Main Author: Marshall, Caryn Natalie
Other Authors: White, Rowan
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10321/406
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-dut-oai-localhost-10321-4062016-04-21T04:10:54Z An investigation into the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain Marshall, Caryn Natalie White, Rowan Korporaal, Charmaine Maria Chiropractic Backache--Chiropractic treatment Electrotherapeutics Spinal adjustment Mini-dissertation in partial compliance with the requirements for the Masters Degree in Technology: Chiropractic, in the Department of Chiropractic at the Durban University of Technology, 2009 The aim of this study was to investigate the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain. The objectives evaluated the effectiveness of only administering Transeva therapy alone, or Spinal manipulative therapy alone as well as Transeva therapy with Spinal manipulative therapy on mechanical low back pain with respect to the patients’ subjective and objective responses to the respective treatment group. The final objective was to correlate the subjective and objective data collected to determine the effectiveness of each of the therapies in comparison with another. Design: A sample of thirty patients diagnosed with mechanical low back pain were accepted into the study. These patients were randomly divided into three groups of 10, which received different treatment protocols for mechanical low back pain. Outcome Measure: The following outcomes were measured; a decrease in pain (measured with the Numerical Pain Rating Scale (NRS), a decrease in disability (measured with the Roland-Morris Questionnaire), a decrease in local tenderness (measured with the pressure Algometer) and an increase in lumbar range of motion (measured with the Inclinometer). The data was collected prior to treatment one, prior to treatment four and at the sixth follow-up visit. Results and Conclusion: All groups improved with the treatments they received; however, no single treatment was statistically better than any other treatment intervention tested. However, the Spinal manipulative therapy group had a statistically significant faster reduction in pain on the NRS readings with p=0.048. 2009-05-05T06:13:23Z 2009-05-05T06:13:23Z 2009 Thesis 319208 http://hdl.handle.net/10321/406 en 123 p
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Chiropractic
Backache--Chiropractic treatment
Electrotherapeutics
Spinal adjustment
spellingShingle Chiropractic
Backache--Chiropractic treatment
Electrotherapeutics
Spinal adjustment
Marshall, Caryn Natalie
An investigation into the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain
description Mini-dissertation in partial compliance with the requirements for the Masters Degree in Technology: Chiropractic, in the Department of Chiropractic at the Durban University of Technology, 2009 === The aim of this study was to investigate the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain. The objectives evaluated the effectiveness of only administering Transeva therapy alone, or Spinal manipulative therapy alone as well as Transeva therapy with Spinal manipulative therapy on mechanical low back pain with respect to the patients’ subjective and objective responses to the respective treatment group. The final objective was to correlate the subjective and objective data collected to determine the effectiveness of each of the therapies in comparison with another. Design: A sample of thirty patients diagnosed with mechanical low back pain were accepted into the study. These patients were randomly divided into three groups of 10, which received different treatment protocols for mechanical low back pain. Outcome Measure: The following outcomes were measured; a decrease in pain (measured with the Numerical Pain Rating Scale (NRS), a decrease in disability (measured with the Roland-Morris Questionnaire), a decrease in local tenderness (measured with the pressure Algometer) and an increase in lumbar range of motion (measured with the Inclinometer). The data was collected prior to treatment one, prior to treatment four and at the sixth follow-up visit. Results and Conclusion: All groups improved with the treatments they received; however, no single treatment was statistically better than any other treatment intervention tested. However, the Spinal manipulative therapy group had a statistically significant faster reduction in pain on the NRS readings with p=0.048.
author2 White, Rowan
author_facet White, Rowan
Marshall, Caryn Natalie
author Marshall, Caryn Natalie
author_sort Marshall, Caryn Natalie
title An investigation into the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain
title_short An investigation into the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain
title_full An investigation into the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain
title_fullStr An investigation into the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain
title_full_unstemmed An investigation into the relative effectiveness of Transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain
title_sort investigation into the relative effectiveness of transeva and spinal manipulative therapy for mechanical low back pain
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10321/406
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