The Effect of Manual Therapy Plus Exercise in Patients with Lateral Ankle Sprains: A Critically Appraised Topic with a Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Focused Clinical Question
2.2. Search Strategy
- Population: patients with an LAS;
- Intervention: manual therapy plus therapeutic exercise;
- Comparison: therapeutic exercise;
- Outcome: clinical outcomes (i.e., pain, joint mobility and lower limb function);
- Type of study: randomized clinical trial (RCT).
2.3. Inclusion Criteria and Exclusion Criteria
- Patients with an LAS were enrolled;
- The effect of manual therapy plus therapeutic exercise, compared with therapeutic exercise alone, was investigated;
- The study design was as an RCT;
- The publication languages were English or Italian.
- Patients with ankle instability or chronic ankle instability (CAI) were enrolled;
- The effects of only manual therapy or only therapeutic exercise were investigated;
- The study design was a cohort, non-randomized clinical trial or not identified as an RCT.
2.4. Evidence of Quality Assessment
- A is assigned to consistent, high-quality patient-oriented evidence;
- B is assigned to evidence that is inconsistent or limited quality patient-oriented evidence;
- C is assigned to evidence that is considered an opinion, disease-oriented or a case series.
2.5. Data Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Summary of Search and Key Findings
3.2. Results of Quality Assessment from the Best Available Evidence
3.3. Results of the Meta-Analysis
3.4. Clinical Bottom Line
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Database | Search String |
---|---|
MEDLINE | (“Ankle Injuries”[Mesh] or (ankle injur*) OR (ankle sprain*) or (ankle strain*)) AND (“Exercise Therapy”[Mesh] OR “Exercise”[Mesh] or exercis*) AND (“Musculoskeletal Manipulations”[Mesh] or (musculoskeletal manipulation*) or (manual therap*) or (manipulative therap*)) |
PEDro | ankle sprain* manual therap* exercis* |
EMBASE | (‘ankle injuries’/exp OR (ankle AND injur*) OR ‘ankle sprain’/exp OR (ankle AND sprain*) OR (ankle strain*)) AND (‘exercise’/exp OR exercis*) AND (‘manual therapy’/exp OR (manual AND therap*)) |
CINAHL | (ankle AND (sprain* OR injur*)) AND (exercis*) AND (manual therap*) |
Plaza-Manzano et al. 2016 [55] | Truyols-Dominiguez et al. 2013 [56] | Cleland-Minkten et al. 2013 [37] | |
---|---|---|---|
Study design | Randomized controlled trial | Randomized controlled trial | Randomized controlled trial |
Partecipants | N = 56 Age = 24 ± 2.5 Gender = 39 M–17 F Patients were randomly recruited from the University Hospital of Madrid | N = 50 Age = 33 ± 10 Gender = 37 M–13 F Patients were randomly recruited from a physical therapy clinic in Madrid | N = 74 Age = 35.1 ± 11 Gender = 38 M–36 F Patients were randomly recruited from 4 physical therapy clinics in the USA |
Inclusion criteria |
|
| Patients with an inversion ankle sprain grade I or II, with an NPRS score greater than 3 and a negative result from the Ottawa ankle rules |
Exclusion criteria |
|
|
|
Intervention investigated | The experimental group performed 4 weeks of exercises combined with manual therapy (mobilization to influence joint and nerve structures). The control group performed 4 weeks of proprioceptive and strengthening exercises. The proprioceptive and strengthening exercise protocol consisted of four sessions of six exercises that were repeated twice a week and progressed every week, supervised by two physiotherapists with at least 6 years of experience in Sports Physiotherapy; The manual therapy protocol consisted of mobilization applied at grade III, including large amplitude passive movements repeated 10 times (the duration of techniques was 20–30 s with 2 min of resting) by two physiotherapists who were experts in manual therapy. | The experimental group received the thrust and non-thrust manipulation and exercise protocol in addition with myofascial manual therapy techniques for four sessions, once per week, for 4 weeks. The control group received the same thrust and non-thrust manipulation and exercise protocol for four sessions, once per week, for 4 weeks. Both groups received the same manual therapy protocol (performed for four sessions, once per week, for 4 weeks), which included ankle and foot mobilization (non thrust) applied at grade 3–4 and delivered for 20–30 s for thrust manipulation and exercise. Only the experimental group received myofascial therapy (pressure-release techniques, static strokes and cross-hand interventions) applied three times over the gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior muscles. | Patients in the MTEX group (manual therapy and exercise) were treated twice a week for 4 weeks, and each treatment session included thrust and non-thrust manipulation and mobilizing and strengthening exercises. Patients in the HEP group (home exercise program) attended physical therapy for four sessions for the instruction and progression of strengthening and proprioceptive exercises. The MTEX group was treated by two physical therapists twice weekly for 4 weeks, and each session lasted 30 min. Manual therapy techniques consisted of thrust and non-thrust manipulation performed for 5–30 s bouts at grades I, II, III and IV. Patients were also instructed to perform two self-mobilization techniques at home and strengthening exercises. For 4 weeks daily, the HEP group performed mobilizing exercises for the foot and ankle, gentle stretching exercises, resistive band exercises, one-leg standing activities, standing on a balance board and weight-bearing functional activities. |
Outcome measure | Assessors measured the outcomes (VAS, CAIT, PPT, Active range of motion measured with goniometer, Strength in ankle flexion and extension with dynamic dynamometry) before and after the 4 weeks of treatment. | Assessors measured the outcomes (NPRS, Functional score for the assessment of acute lateral ankle sprains, Active range of motion measured with goniometer, PPT) at the baseline after the last treatment session and at 1 month follow-up. | Assessors measured the outcomes (FAAM, LEFS, NPRS, GRC scale) at the final physical therapy session (4 weeks) and after 6 months. |
Results | The addition of manual therapy to the proprioceptive and strengthening exercise elicited lower pain levels, reduced self-reported ankle instability, greater ankle strength, lower PPT and greater AROM in patients with an LAS. The effect size was large to moderate in the following domains:
| The addition of myofascial techniques to a protocol of thrust/non-thrust manipulation and exercise resulted in statistically significant improvements in pain and function. The effect size between groups was large to moderate in all domains (pain, instability, weight bearing, swelling, walking pattern). | The addition of manual therapy to therapeutic exercise resulted in significant improvements in pain and function in both the short- and long-term follow-up. The effect size between groups was large to moderate (NPRS, FAAM, LEFS, GRC). |
Level of evidence | 1b | 1b | 1b |
Quality assessment score | ROB-2: Low risk of Bias | ROB-2: Low risk of Bias | ROB-2: Low risk of Bias |
Contribution to CAT question | Conclusive contribution | Conclusive contribution | Conclusive contribution |
Study | Bias Arising from the Randomization Process | Bias Due to Deviations from Intended Interventions | Bias Due to Missing Outcome Data | Bias in the Measurement of the Outcome | Bias in the Selection of the Reported Result | Overall Bias |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plaza-Manzano et al., 2016 [55] | LOW | LOW | LOW | LOW | LOW | LOW |
Truyols-Dominiguez et al., 2013 [56] | LOW | LOW | LOW | LOW | LOW | LOW |
Cleland et al., 2013 [37] | LOW | LOW | LOW | LOW | LOW | LOW |
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de Ruvo, R.; Russo, G.; Lena, F.; Giovannico, G.; Neville, C.; Turolla, A.; Torre, M.; Pellicciari, L. The Effect of Manual Therapy Plus Exercise in Patients with Lateral Ankle Sprains: A Critically Appraised Topic with a Meta-Analysis. J. Clin. Med. 2022, 11, 4925. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11164925
de Ruvo R, Russo G, Lena F, Giovannico G, Neville C, Turolla A, Torre M, Pellicciari L. The Effect of Manual Therapy Plus Exercise in Patients with Lateral Ankle Sprains: A Critically Appraised Topic with a Meta-Analysis. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2022; 11(16):4925. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11164925
Chicago/Turabian Stylede Ruvo, Rocco, Giuseppe Russo, Francesco Lena, Giuseppe Giovannico, Christoper Neville, Andrea Turolla, Monica Torre, and Leonardo Pellicciari. 2022. "The Effect of Manual Therapy Plus Exercise in Patients with Lateral Ankle Sprains: A Critically Appraised Topic with a Meta-Analysis" Journal of Clinical Medicine 11, no. 16: 4925. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11164925
APA Stylede Ruvo, R., Russo, G., Lena, F., Giovannico, G., Neville, C., Turolla, A., Torre, M., & Pellicciari, L. (2022). The Effect of Manual Therapy Plus Exercise in Patients with Lateral Ankle Sprains: A Critically Appraised Topic with a Meta-Analysis. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(16), 4925. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11164925