Home Community Ultrasound Ultrasound-guided injections help ease chronic Achilles tendon pain

Ultrasound-guided injections help ease chronic Achilles tendon pain

Communities

Patients with chronic tendinosis of the Achilles tendon can experience a reduction in pain when injected with a small amount of a dextrose solution, according to a recent study.

Patients with chronic tendinosis of the Achilles tendon can experience a reduction in pain when injected with a small amount of a dextrose solution, according to a recent study conducted by researchers at St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver, BC.

"Chronic tendinosis is a common overuse injury which can be very painful and debilitating and can affect many tendons throughout the body," said Norman J. Maxwell, MD, lead author of the study. "Research has shown that this condition results from impaired healing of recurrent injury to the tendon. Research has also shown that chronic tendinosis is not an inflammatory but a degenerative process," he said.

"We decided to treat the areas of degeneration and small tears in the tendon by injecting a 25 per cent dextrose solution which would induce an inflammatory process in that area of the tendon and initiate normal wound healing," said Dr. Maxwell. "We performed this treatment using a small needle under ultrasound guidance so that the abnormal areas could be accurately targeted," he said.

According to the study, 32 out of 36 patients who had long standing chronic tendinosis of the Achilles tendon with a mean duration of symptoms of 28.6 months were treated successfully. There was marked reduction in tendon pain at rest and during tendon loading activity following completion of the injection therapy. A telephone interview with 30 patients in the study group a mean of 12 months after their last injection found that 20 of the 30 patients still were asymptomatic and nine patients had only mild symptoms with one patient having moderate symptoms.

"Despite these very encouraging results, further studies are required to validate the effectiveness of this treatment for chronic tendinosis," said Dr. Maxwell. "Some patients respond to the treatment better than others, largely due to the presence or absence of calcifications. We have observed that patients with calcifications in their tendons appear to respond less well to the treatment than patients who have no calcifications," he said.

Trackback(0)
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
smaller | bigger

busy
 

Related Articles

Ultrasound Products

Ultrasound Companies

ULTRASOUND Join Group

Description: This group is for all medical professionals involved in therapeutic ultrasound and ultrasound-based diagnostic medical imaging (medical sonography or ultrasonography). Keep-up-to date with the latest news, informed discussion, and network with thought leaders.
Created: August 25, 2009, 9:11 pm
Owner: Devisree

Latest News

March 17, 2010, 10:38 am By Deepa Flex Focus Ultrasound Wins iF Product Design Award Analogic Corporation announced that the Flex Focus mobile ultrasound scanner received an iF Product ...
March 17, 2010, 10:00 am By Deepa AIUM Training Guidelines for Musculoskeletal Ultrasound Performance The AIUM announced that 4 professional societies have collaborated with AIUM to endorse the recent A...
March 17, 2010, 7:17 am By Deepa MRgFUS for Removes Uterine Fibroids The new interventional radiology tool, magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) is a mi...
March 16, 2010, 12:04 pm By Deepa Concepts of Ruminant & Camelid Reproductive Ultrasonography Research and Markets has announced the addition of John Wiley and Sons Ltd's new report "Practical A...
March 16, 2010, 11:22 am By Deepa Endobronchial Ultrasound To Diagnose Lung Cancer Endobronchial ultrasound being used by thoracic surgeons at Rush University Medical Center offers a ...
Discussions in ULTRASOUND

Paul Keough
October 5, 2009, 1:45 pm Is Ultrasound the most underutilized? Given its cheap, gives an initial sense of diagnosis, new methods are improving resolution, why do w...
Comments in ULTRASOUND
No Comments added yet.
Members
View all