1. Achilles tendinopathy: A prospective study on the effect of active rehabilitation and steroid injections in a clinical setting.
- Author
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Wetke, E., Johannsen, F., and Langberg, H.
- Subjects
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COMBINED modality therapy , *EXERCISE , *EXERCISE therapy , *HOME care services , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MUSCLE contraction , *MUSCLE strength , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *REHABILITATION , *STRETCH (Physiology) , *T-test (Statistics) , *PAIN measurement , *VISUAL analog scale , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *ACHILLES tendinitis , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MANN Whitney U Test ,THERAPEUTIC use of glucocorticoids - Abstract
In published efficacy studies on Achilles tendinopathy ( AT) exercise alone results in improvement in 60-90% of the cases. However, this high success rate cannot be expected in usual clinical practice. We prospectively investigated the effectiveness of a treatment regimen consisting of home-based exercises (concentric, eccentric, and stretching) and optional glucocorticosteroid ( GCS) injections in patients with ( AT) in a usual clinical setting. Patients unable to commence or progress in exercise were offered GCS, hypothesizing that the GCS would facilitate exercise. Ninety-three consecutive patients with AT referred to two outpatient rheumatology clinics were registered, and seen at five visits over a 6-month period. Exercises seemed to have a slow, but long-lasting effect with GCS having a dramatic short-term effect on symptoms. Twenty-six percent of the patients could proceed with training alone, the remainder received one to three supplementary GCS. There were significant improvements on all outcome variables over time ( P ≤ 0.001). At follow-up, 42 had no more symptoms, 29 good result, 16 slightly improved, 4 unchanged, and 2 slightly worse. Overall, 94% of the patients had improved, and we thus recommend the use of GCS injections in AT patients if training alone does not lead to improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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