Tennis Elbow Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase 2/Phase 3 of the Randomized Control Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Autologous Blood Injection Versus Local Corticosteroid Injection for Treatment of Lateral Epicondylitis.
Lateral epicondylitis, is a common problem encountered in the orthopaedic practice. Histopathological reports have shown that lateral epicondylitis is not an inflammatory process but a degenerative condition termed 'tendinosis'. Beneficial effects of local corticosteroid infiltration have sound lack of scientific rationale, since surgical specimens show lack of any inflammatory process. Recently an injection of "autologous blood injection" has been reported to be effective for both intermediate and long term outcomes. It is hypothesized that blood contains platelet derived growth factor induce fibroblastic mitosis and chemotactic polypeptides such as transforming growth factor cause fibroblasts to migrate and specialize and have been found to induce healing cascade. The objective of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of autologous blood injection versus local corticosteroid injection in the management of lateral epicondylitis.
Much controversy has been there over the pathophysiology and there is not enough scientific
evidence to favour any particular type of treatment for acute lateral epicondylitis.
Currently degeneration of the origin of the extensor carpi radialis brevis (ECRB), repeated
micro trauma and incomplete healing response has been accepted as the cause of lateral
epicondylitis by most of the researchers.
Histopathological reports have shown that lateral epicondylitis is not an inflammatory
process but a degenerative condition termed 'tendinosis'. There are numerous treatment
modalities for lateral epicondylitis both conservative and operative. Most conservative
modalities such as local corticosteroid injection have focused on suppressing inflammatory
process that does not actually exist. A recent review article concluded that for short term
outcomes (6 weeks), statistically significant and clinically relevant differences were found
on pain and global improvement with corticosteroid injection compared to placebo, local
anaesthetic, or other conservative treatments. For intermediate (6 weeks to 6 months) and
long term outcomes (more than 6 months), no statistically significant or clinically relevant
results in favour of corticosteroid injections were found. So it is not possible to draw a
firm conclusion on the effectiveness of corticosteroid injection.
Recently an injection of autologous blood has been reported to be effective for both
intermediate and long term outcomes for the treatment of lateral epicondylitis. There was a
significant decrease in pain. It is hypothesized that mitogens such as platelet derived
growth factor induce fibroblastic mitosis and chemotactic polypeptides such as transforming
growth factor cause fibroblasts to migrate and specialize and have been found to cause
angiogenesis. A specific humoral mediator may promote the healing cascade in the treatment
of tendinosis as well. These growth factors trigger stem cell recruitment, increase local
vascularity and directly stimulate the production of collagen by tendon sheath fibroblasts.
Autologous blood was selected as the medium for injection because (1) its application is
minimally traumatic, (2) it has a reduced risk for immune-mediated rejection, devoid of
potential complications such as hypoglycemia, skin atrophy, tendon tears associated with
corticosteroid injection (3) it is simple to acquire and prepare, easy to carry out as
outpatient procedure and (4) it is inexpensive.
There are very few studies done to evaluate injection of autologous blood for lateral
epicondylitis as treatment modality. Hence it is evaluated by comparing with the
corticosteroid injection which is a commonly practiced conservative treatment modality.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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