Dry Needling and Manipulation vs. Mobilization, Exercise and Interferential Electrotherapy for Shoulder Impingement (Subacromial Pain Syndrome)
Electric Dry Needling and Spinal Manipulation vs. Impairment-based Mobilization, Exercise and Interferential Electrotherapy for Patients With Shoulder Impingement (Subacromial Pain Syndrome): a Multi-center Randomized Control Trial
Sponsor: Alabama Physical Therapy & Acupuncture
This NA trial investigates Subacromial Pain Syndrome and is currently completed. Alabama Physical Therapy & Acupuncture leads this study, which shows 9 recorded versions since 2017 — indicating limited longitudinal coverage. The change history captured here reflects the iterative nature of clinical trial conduct.
Status Flow
Change History
9 versions recorded-
Sep 2024 — Present [monthly]
Completed NA
-
Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Completed NA
-
Jan 2021 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Completed NA
-
Nov 2019 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Completed NA
-
Jun 2019 — Nov 2019 [monthly]
Completed NA
Status: Recruiting → Completed
▶ Show 4 earlier versions
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Aug 2018 — Jun 2019 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
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Jul 2018 — Aug 2018 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
-
Jun 2018 — Jul 2018 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
-
Jul 2017 — Jun 2018 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
First recorded
Jun 2017
Trial started
Per CT.gov start date — pre-dates our first snapshot
Eligibility Summary
No eligibility information available.
Contact Information
- Alabama Physical Therapy & Acupuncture
- Universidad Rey Juan Carlos
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .