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Achilles Tendinopathy Treated With Training and Injections

B

Bispebjerg Hospital

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Achilles Tendinopathy

Treatments

Other: Training
Drug: Ultrasound guided injection with Glucocorticosteroid
Behavioral: Reduction in running and jumping
Drug: Ultrasound guided injection with local anaestethic

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02580630
H-15006579

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to compare in a randomized double blinded controlled trial the effect of heavy slow resistance exercises combined with ultrasound guided injections with local anesthetic with or without glucocorticosteroid in patients with achilles tendinopathy.

Full description

Achilles tendinopathy is a common and often longlasting condition especially in a sports population. The highest incidence is seen in sports involving running and jumping.

As the primary treatment eccentric exercises is recommended and 60-90% will benefit by that. Other studies have shown equal effect of stretching exercises. In a new study heavy slow resistance exercises has proven effective in achilles tendinopathy and the best treatment in lig.patellae tendinopathy.

Injection with glucocorticosteroid is often used in the daily clinic, though inflammation is rarely found. Fredberg 2004 found a good short term effect of glucocorticosteroid injection in an RCT, but no effect in the long term, which the investigators explained by an aggressive rehabilitation with running after a few days. Even though 60-90% will benefit from exercises in efficacy studies, a recent pragmatic effectiveness study by Weetke 2015 found that only 26% did benefit from training alone, but if supplemented by need with 1-3 injections of glucocorticosteroid 76% achieved excellent or good result.

To our knowledge no randomized clinical trials have investigated the combined effect of training and injections. The hypothesis of this study is, that training and slowly progressive rehabilitation combined with glucocorticosteroid injections will have better effect than the same training and rehabilitation combined with injections of local anesthetic.

Enrollment

100 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Midsubstance pain in the achilles tendon
  • Symptoms for at least 3 months
  • Ultrasound scanning at the first visit shows thickness of the achilles tendon above 7 mm or 20% thicker than the contralateral.
  • Patient can read and understand danish

Exclusion criteria

  • Earlier operations in the foot and leg, that is judged to complicate training
  • known arthritis.
  • known diabetes
  • Leg ulcerations or infections in the foot.
  • Judged unable to comply with the training protocol.
  • Daily use of pain killers
  • Glucocorticosteroid injection to the diseased achilles tendon within the last 6 months.
  • Earlier allergic reactions to glucocorticosteroid or local anesthetic.
  • Pregnancy or planning to become pregnant
  • BMI above 30.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

100 participants in 2 patient groups

Training and glucocorticosteroid
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients are instructed to carry out strengthening exercises for the diseased achilles tendon 3 times a week. Physiotherapist will instruct all patients in these heavy slow resistance exercises. First time one week after the first injection, and then every month. All patients are informed to a reduction in running and jumping sports for the first 3 months, thereafter slowly progressing to normal sports activity. Ultrasound guided injection with glucocorticosteroid: 1ml Lidocain 5 mg/ml and 1 ml methylprednisolone 40mg/ml in Kagers triangle underneath the thickest part of the achilles tendon. Injection is given every months until the tendon pain is markedly diminished (max 3 injections).
Treatment:
Behavioral: Reduction in running and jumping
Drug: Ultrasound guided injection with Glucocorticosteroid
Other: Training
Training and local anesthetic
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients are instructed to carry out strengthening exercises for the diseased achilles tendon 3 times a week. Physiotherapist will instruct all patients in these heavy slow resistance exercises. First time one week after the first injection, and then every month. All patients are informed to a reduction in running and jumping sports for the first 3 months, thereafter slowly progressing to normal sports activity. Ultrasound guided injection with local anaestethic: 1ml Lidocain 5 mg/ml and 1 ml intralipid (for blinding) in Kagers triangle underneath the thickest part of the achilles tendon. Injection is given every months until the tendon pain is markedly diminished (max 3 injections).
Treatment:
Drug: Ultrasound guided injection with local anaestethic
Behavioral: Reduction in running and jumping
Other: Training

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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