rss
Br J Sports Med doi:10.1136/bjsm.2008.052761

A systematic review of four injection therapies for lateral epicondylosis: prolotherapy, polidocanol, whole blood and platelet rich plasma

  1. David Rabago (david.rabago{at}fammed.wisc.edu)
  1. University of Wisconsin, United States
    1. Thomas Best
    1. Ohio State University, United States
      1. Aleksandra Zgierska
      1. University of Wisconsin, United States
        1. Eva Zeisig
        1. University of Umea, Sweden
          1. Michael Ryan
          1. University of British Columbia, Canada
            1. David Crane
            1. Crane Clinic, United States
              • Published Online First 21 November 2008

              Abstract

              Objective: To appraise existing evidence for prolotherapy, polidocanol, autologous whole blood and platelet-rich plasma injection therapies for lateral epicondylosis (LE).

              Design: Systematic Review.

              Data sources: Medline, Embase, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Allied and Complementary Medicine. Search strategy: names and descriptors of the therapies and LE.

              Study Selection: All human studies assessing the four therapies for LE.

              Main results: Results of five prospective case series and four controlled trials (3 prolotherapy, 2 polidocanol, 3 autologous whole blood and 1 platelet-rich plasma) suggest each of the four therapies is effective for LE. In follow-up periods ranging from 9 to 108 weeks, studies reported sustained, statistically significant(p<0.05) improvement on visual analog scale primary outcome pain score measures and disease specific questionnaires; relative effect sizes ranged from 51% to 94%; Cohen’s d ranged from 0.68 to 6.68. Secondary outcomes also improved, including biomechanical elbow function assessment (polidocanol and prolotherapy), presence of abnormalities and increased vascularity on ultrasound (autologous whole blood and polidocanol). Subjects reported satisfaction with therapies on single-item assessments. All studies were limited by small sample size.

              Conclusions: There is strong pilot-level evidence supporting the use of prolotherapy, polidocanol, autologous whole blood and platelet-rich plasma injections in the treatment of LE. Rigorous studies of sufficient sample size, assessing these injection therapies using validated clinical, radiological and biomechanical measures, and tissue injury/healing-responsive biomarkers, are needed to determine long-term effectiveness and safety, and whether these techniques can play a definitive role in the management of LE and other tendinopathies.

              Latest from BJSM blog

              Latest from BJSM blog

              Register for free content


              Free sample
              This recent issue is free to all users to allow everyone the opportunity to see the full scope and typical content of BJSM.
              View free sample issue >>

              Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.


            1. BJSM blog now on Kindle