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Current evidence does not support the use of Kinesio Taping in clinical practice: a systematic review  Patrícia do Carmo Silva Parreira, Lucíola da Cunha.

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Presentation on theme: "Current evidence does not support the use of Kinesio Taping in clinical practice: a systematic review  Patrícia do Carmo Silva Parreira, Lucíola da Cunha."— Presentation transcript:

1 Current evidence does not support the use of Kinesio Taping in clinical practice: a systematic review  Patrícia do Carmo Silva Parreira, Lucíola da Cunha Menezes Costa, Luiz Carlos Hespanhol Junior, Alexandre Dias Lopes, Leonardo Oliveira Pena Costa  Journal of Physiotherapy  Volume 60, Issue 1, Pages (March 2014) DOI: /j.jphys Copyright © 2014 Australian Physiotherapy Association Terms and Conditions

2 Figure 1 Selection of studies for inclusion in the systematic review.
Journal of Physiotherapy  , 31-39DOI: ( /j.jphys ) Copyright © 2014 Australian Physiotherapy Association Terms and Conditions

3 Figure 2 Mean difference (95% CI) of Kinesio Taping versus sham taping in participants with musculoskeletal conditions for the outcomes pain (A) and disability (B). Note that no pooling is conducted because the clinical conditions of the participants differ. Note that these estimates are based on raw means and SDs only, so some differ slightly from the estimates in Table 4 because more complex analyses were used in the original publications. Asc: ascending; desc: descending; ODI: Oswestry Disability Index; RMDQ: Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire. Journal of Physiotherapy  , 31-39DOI: ( /j.jphys ) Copyright © 2014 Australian Physiotherapy Association Terms and Conditions


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