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Treatment of Lateral Elbow Tendinopathy

B

Bispebjerg Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Epicondylitis, Lateral Humeral

Treatments

Procedure: Dry Needling
Drug: Cortico-Steroid Injection. Depomedrol 40mg/1ml.
Procedure: Placebo
Other: Strength Training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02521298
H-15002993

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study investigates the treatment effect on lateral elbow tendinopathy of strength training in combination with cortico-steroid injection, dry-needling or placebo in a double-blinded randomized controlled trial.

Full description

The prevalence of lateral elbow tendinopathy is prevalence of 1-3%, with a peak incidence between 35-50 years of age (Green et al., 2002). The main symptoms are pain over the lateral humeral epicondyle upon palpation and pain full resisted dorsiflexion of the wrist. Ultrasonographic changes include hyper-/hypo-echoic areas and increased doppler signal in the most proximal part of the common extensor tendon. The condition is often self-limiting, however full recovery often takes months to years and recurrence is common. Several different treatment modalities are used in order to increase tendon healing and decrease time to recovery. Deep transverse friction massage showed no significant effect on pain, grip strength or function relative to other physiotherapy modalities (Brosseau et al., 2002). Anti-inflammatory treatment with NSAID's or corticosteroids is typically effective in the short term, however on a longer term there is a poorer outcome than with other treatment strategies including exercise (Coombes et al., 2010). Surgery does not seem to have any beneficial effect (Buchbinder et al., 2011), and there are no conclusive data regarding the use of orthotic devises for the treatment of lateral elbow tendinopathy (Struijs et al., 2002). Eccentric exercise of the extensor muscles has been shown to reduced pain, increase muscle strength, and decrease tendon thickness and time to return to sport (Croisier et al., 2007).

Loading of human tendon leads to increased tendon collagen synthesis, and interestingly, tendon tissue sampling (biopsies), which causes a minor trauma to the tendon has been shown to increase the level of growth factors locally and stimulate tendon collagen synthesis (Magnusson et al., 2010).

It is hypothesized that both minimal tissue damage and anti-inflammatory treatment could increase tendon healing and decrease time to recovery, when combined with mechanical loading.

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Pain around the lateral part of the elbow joint for more than 4 weeks.
  2. Pain on palpation of the proximal part of the common extensor tendon.
  3. Pain reproduced with resisted dorsiflexion of the wrist.
  4. Dash score > 30.
  5. Ultrasonographic appearance consistent with lateral elbow tendinopathy (irregular appearance of the tendon, hypo-/hyper-echoic changes, pathological doppler signal, increased tendon thickness).

Exclusion criteria

  • American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) > 2 (mild systemic disease).

  • Patients with symptoms consistent with differential diagnoses such as:

    • referred pain,
    • radiohumeral synovitis and bursitis,
    • posterior interosseous nerve entrapment (radial tunnel syndrome),
    • osteoarthritis of the elbow, and
    • prior injections or acupuncture around the elbow joint within the last 6 months

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

60 participants in 3 patient groups

Strength Training + Placebo
Active Comparator group
Description:
Strength Training: 2 weeks after the inclusion, the patients are instructed in heavy slow resistance exercise by a physiotherapist. Exercise is continued 3 times/week for the following 12 weeks, with supervised follow-up at week 4, 8 and 12. Exercise consists of wrist extension, flexion and supination/pronation. Starting at 3 x 15 repetition maximum, gradually increasing in weight to 3 x 6 repetition maximum from week 8. Placebo: Ultrasound-guided subcutaneous injection of 2 ml isotonic saline over the proximal part of the common extensor tendon origin using a 0,8 mm needle. No-touch technique is used, and the patient is blinded with regards to the content of the syringe and the ultrasound-image.
Treatment:
Other: Strength Training
Procedure: Placebo
Strength Training + Cortico-Steroid Inj.
Experimental group
Description:
Strength Training: 2 weeks after the inclusion, the patients are instructed in heavy slow resistance exercise by a physiotherapist. Exercise is continued 3 times/week for the following 12 weeks, with supervised follow-up at week 4, 8 and 12. Exercise consists of wrist extension, flexion and supination/pronation. Starting at 3 x 15 repetition maximum, gradually increasing in weight to 3 x 6 repetition maximum from week 8. Cortico-Steroid Injection: Ultrasound-guided injection of 1 ml depomedrol 40 mg/ml + 1 ml lidocaine 10 mg/ml deep to the proximal part of the common extensor tendon origin using a 0,8 mm needle. No-touch technique is used, and the patient is blinded with regards to the content of the syringe and the ultrasound-image.
Treatment:
Other: Strength Training
Drug: Cortico-Steroid Injection. Depomedrol 40mg/1ml.
Strength Training + Dry Needling
Experimental group
Description:
Strength Training: 2 weeks after the inclusion, the patients are instructed in heavy slow resistance exercise by a physiotherapist. Exercise is continued 3 times/week for the following 12 weeks, with supervised follow-up at week 4, 8 and 12. Exercise consists of wrist extension, flexion and supination/pronation. Starting at 3 x 15 repetition maximum, gradually increasing in weight to 3 x 6 repetition maximum from week 8. Dry Needling: Ultrasound-guided penetration of the proximal part of the common extensor tendon origin is repeated 10 times using a 0,8 mm needle, followed by subcutaneous injection of 2 ml isotonic saline superficial to the tendon. No-touch technique is used, and the patient is blinded with regards to the content of the syringe and the ultrasound-image.
Treatment:
Other: Strength Training
Procedure: Dry Needling

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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