“…n = 34Immediately after intervention. | Cervical ROM (flexion, extension, bilateral lateral flexion and rotation) (°). | S.S. group x time interaction: cervical extension ROM and bilateral lateral flexion.Extension ROM:SMT-Control: 3.76° (− 0.37, 7.15)SMT-Stretch: − 4.29° (− 7.72, − 0.86)Control-Stretch: − 8.05° (− 11.42, − 4.68)L lateral flexion ROM:SMT-Control: 2.82° (0.18, 5.46)SMT-Stretch: 0.35° (− 2.06, 2.76)Control-Stretch: − 2.47° (− 5.26, 0.32)R lateral flexion ROM:SMT-Control: 3.76° (0.94, 6.58)SMT-Stretch: − 0.47° (− 3.31, 2.37)Control-Stretch: − 4.23° (− 7.26, − 1.20)Cervical flexion ROM:SMT-Control: 3.61° (0.16, 7.06)SMT-Stretch: − 0.65° (− 3.86, 2.56)Control-Stretch: − 4.26° (− 7.58, − 0.94)Left cervical rotation ROM:SMT-Control: 3.0° (0.38, 5.62)SMT-Stretch: 0.53° (− 1.70, 2.76)Control-Stretch: − 2.47° (− 5.04, − 0.10)Right cervical rotation ROM:SMT-Control: 1.88° (− 0.70, 4.46)SMT-Stretch: 0.88° (− 1.23, 2.99)Control-Stretch: − 1.0° (− 3.77, 1.77) | Biomechanical Outcomes: Other |
Ditcharles et al, 2017 [34] | Right-handed young healthy adults; 24–32 years; France; n = 22; Randomized controlled trial. | Standing “lift-off” technique HVLA SMT to T9. n = 11 | Sham: same experimental protocol as HVLA group using “light touch methodology”, without compression or traction. |
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