{Reference Type}: Journal Article {Title}: Mulligan manual therapy added to exercise improves headache frequency, intensity and disability more than exercise alone in people with cervicogenic headache: a randomised trial. {Author}: Satpute K;Bedekar N;Hall T; {Journal}: J Physiother {Volume}: 70 {Issue}: 3 {Year}: 2024 Jul 19 {Factor}: 10.714 {DOI}: 10.1016/j.jphys.2024.06.002 {Abstract}: OBJECTIVE: What is the effect of a 4-week regimen of Mulligan manual therapy (MMT) plus exercise compared with exercise alone for managing cervicogenic headache? Is MMT plus exercise more effective than sham MMT plus exercise? Are any benefits maintained at 26 weeks of follow-up?
METHODS: A three-armed, parallel-group, randomised clinical trial with concealed allocation, blinded assessment of some outcomes and intention-to-treat analysis.
METHODS: Ninety-nine people with cervicogenic headache as per International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-3).
METHODS: Participants were randomly allocated to 4 weeks of: MMT with exercise, sham MMT with exercise or exercise alone.
METHODS: The primary outcome was headache frequency. Secondary outcomes were headache intensity, headache duration, medication intake, headache-related disability, upper cervical rotation range of motion, pressure pain thresholds and patient satisfaction. Outcome measures were collected at baseline and at 4, 13 and 26 weeks.
RESULTS: MMT plus exercise reduced headache frequency more than exercise alone immediately after the intervention (MD between groups in change from baseline: 2 days/month, 95% CI 2 to 3) and this effect was still evident at 26 weeks (MD 4 days, 95% CI 3 to 4). There were also benefits across all time points in several secondary outcomes: headache intensity, headache duration, headache-related disability, upper cervical rotation and patient satisfaction. Pressure pain thresholds showed benefits at all time points at the zygapophyseal joint and suboccipital areas but not at the upper trapezius. The outcomes in the sham MMT with exercise group were very similar to those of the exercise alone group.
CONCLUSIONS: In people with cervicogenic headache, adding MMT to exercise improved: headache frequency, intensity and duration; headache-related disability; upper cervical rotation; and patient satisfaction. These benefits were not due to placebo effects.
BACKGROUND: CTRI/2019/06/019506.