# Effects of Tai Chi combined with intermediate frequency therapy on patients with chronic nonspecific neck pain: a randomized controlled trial

**Authors:** Kangni Deng, Yuheng Zhou, Jiasi Qian, Lilin Wang, Fan Yu, Bo Wang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpain.2025.1700212 · Frontiers in Pain Research · 2025-11-03

## TL;DR

This study finds that combining Tai Chi with intermediate frequency therapy improves neck pain and cervical spine curvature more than therapy alone.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is demonstrating that Tai Chi enhances intermediate frequency therapy outcomes for chronic nonspecific neck pain.

## Key findings

- Both groups improved in pain, disability, and cervical curvature, but Tai Chi plus therapy improved curvature more.
- Tai Chi combined with intermediate frequency therapy is safe and beneficial for managing chronic nonspecific neck pain.
- The combination therapy showed significant improvement in cervical physiological curvature compared to therapy alone.

## Abstract

Chronic non-specific neck pain (CNSNP) is the most common type of chronic neck pain encountered in clinical practice. Existing studies have demonstrated that intermediate frequency therapy can effectively alleviate neck pain symptoms. Among other conservative treatment modalities, Tai Chi, a typical mind-body exercise, may improve musculoskeletal function and postural control, but its effect on cervical stability and CNSNP remains unclear. The aim of this study was to compare the clinical efficacy of Tai Chi combined with intermediate frequency therapy vs. intermediate frequency therapy alone in patients with CNSNP.

According to the inclusion and exclusion criteria, patients with CNSNP were recruited from the rehabilitation medicine clinic of the Sixth People's Hospital of Kunshan City, resulting in the enrollment of 60 eligible participants. Patients were randomly assigned to either the experimental group (EG) or the control group (CG). The EG received Tai Chi combined with intermediate frequency therapy, while the CG received intermediate frequency therapy alone. The primary outcome was the visual analogue scale (VAS) for pain. Secondary outcomes included the Neck Disability Index (NDI), the D value of cervical physiological curvature measured by x-ray, and the cervical range of motion (ROM) score. The intervention lasted eight weeks, with sessions conducted five times per week, for a total of 40 sessions. Assessments were performed at baseline, at four weeks (mid-intervention), and at the end of eight weeks.

During the study, one participant in the EG withdrew after missing one week of Tai Chi intervention. Two participants in the CG discontinued: one due to a change in their treatment plan, and one for personal reasons. Thus, 57 patients with CNSNP completed the study. Both groups showed significant improvements in VAS, NDI, cervical physiological curvature (D value), and ROM scores after treatment compared to baseline. Notably, the improvement in the D value was significantly greater in the EG than in the CG.

For patients with CNSNP, the combination of Tai Chi and intermediate frequency therapy appeared to alleviate pain and improve function. Compared to intermediate frequency therapy alone, this combined approach significantly improves the physiological curvature of the cervical spine in individuals with CNSNP. Furthermore, these findings suggest that Tai Chi may be a safe and beneficial adjunctive therapy, and may represent a promising alternative for the management of CNSNP. However, larger-scale long-term studies are still needed.

Clinical Trial Registration:
www. itmctr.ccebtcm.org.cn, identifier (TTM-CTR-2025000447).

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** CNSNP (MESH:D019547), Neck Disability (MESH:D006258), pain (MESH:D010146)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

34 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12620424/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12620424