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Clinical Trial Summary

Rotator cuff tendinitis (RCT) has a prevalence between 2.7 and 22%, and predominantly affects middle-aged women. The pathophysiology has not been fully elucidated to date. RCT is characterized by hydroxyapatite crystal deposition in the rotator cuff tendons. Approximately half of the patients with RCT have pain with acute or chronic shoulder mobility limitation. In some patients, RCT shows a tendency for spontaneous and rapid regression. Diagnostic ultrasound (D-US) is a non-invasive, non-ionizing, and relatively inexpensive diagnostic imaging method that is safe and reliable in assessing rotator cuff pathology. It is very sensitive in the identification of calcifications that are shown in grayscale (B-mode) as hyperechoic structures with or without acoustic shadow. Based on ultrasound findings, Chiou HJ et al. have classified calcifications into 4 types: type I are arcuate, type II are fragmented or punctiform, type III are nodular, and type IV are cystic. Spontaneous resorption may occur with type III and IV calcifications. A positive Doppler signal (PD) surrounding the calcification is highly correlated with pain intensity. According to the European Union of Medical Specialists-Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine (UEMS-PRM) guidelines, the basis of RCT therapy is individual medical gymnastics (IMG). It includes exercises aimed to restore full shoulder mobility, and improve rotator cuff and scapular stabilizer muscles strength. Other passive procedures are elective in the choice of treatment. Ultrasound therapy is often used in the treatment of musculoskeletal shoulder pathology due to its thermal and non-thermal effects. It is considered that tissue heating stimulates healing (vasodilation, acceleration of the metabolism, and improvement of the viscoelastic properties of the connective tissue). The frequency of ultrasound therapy is selected depending on the desired depth of action (3 MHz for surface structures up to 2.5 cm depth, and 1 MHz for deeper structures, up to 5 cm depth). Pulse mode is commonly used in acute, while continuous in chronic conditions. To date, only a few studies have evaluated the reduction in calcification size after ultrasound therapy. Although ultrasound therapy is routinely used in the treatment of painful shoulder, reviewing the results of research published so far, we can say that current knowledge about the effectiveness of ultrasound therapy in RCT is inconsistent (only several studies with a small number of subjects, different parameters of applied ultrasound therapy in terms of penetration depth, applied energy and duration of treatment). This indicates the need for further research.


Clinical Trial Description

The research will be conducted in the Clinic for Rheumatic Diseases and Rehabilitation, University Hospital Center Zagreb. The research will be a double-blind randomized control prospective study. Randomization of patients will be performed before the intervention in the R software package and the results of the randomization will be known only to the therapist who will be involved in the treatment. The respondent and the examiner (doctor) will not be aware of in which group the patient is enrolled. All respondents will sign an informed consent before the study begins. Research has been approved by the Ethics Committee of Clinical Hospital Center Zagreb and the Ethics Committee of the School of Medicine, University of Zagreb. The minimum sample size of a total of 42 subjects (21 in each group) was estimated according to the following characteristics: type 1 error (α = 0.05), power (1-β = 0.8) and effect size [(effect size) 0.2], with the expected use of two - way analysis of variance with two independent groups and two repeated measurements (2x2 ANOVA) with an estimated minimum correlation between repeated measurements r = 0.6. Inclusion criteria are symptomatic RCT (VAS pain ≥ 4 + limited shoulder mobility) with D-US calcification size ≥ 5 mm, calcification type I and II according to Chiou HJ et al., and disease duration ≥ 2 months. Exclusion criteria are asymptomatic RCT or RCT with mild symptoms (VAS pain ≤ 3+ normal shoulder mobility), calcification size <5 mm, type III and IV calcification according to Chiou HJ et al., duration symptoms less than 2 months, rotator cuff tendon rupture, adhesive capsulitis, application of corticosteroids in the examined shoulder in the previous 3 months, glucocorticoid therapy, physical shoulder therapy in the previous 6 months, shock wave therapy in the previous 12 months, prior percutaneous calcification irrigation, current cervical or cervicobrachial pain syndrome, inflammatory rheumatic disease, scapular dyskinesia with positive assisted and repository scapular test, subacromial/subdeltoid bursitis, recent trauma or malignancy in malignant disease. During the study, respondents will be able to relieve pain with paracetamol and/or tramadol. Respondents will keep a diary of analgesia, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and cryo massage will not be allowed due to their anti-inflammatory effect. The investigators will record age, sex, dominant arm, height, body weight, body mass index, cigarette smoking, medications, physical activity (sports), and profession. Clinical examination will be performed on the first day and the last day of the therapy. Ultrasound therapy (Sonopuls 490u, Enraf-Nonius, Rotterdam, Kingdom of the Netherlands) will be used with continuous output, frequency 1 MHz, intensity 1.5 W / cm2 and duration 10 min per treatment, on the front of the shoulder, on the surface of 2 ultrasound heads (10 cm2), with the position of the arm in adduction and internal rotation in RCT of the supraspinatus, adduction and external rotation of the arm in RCT of the subscapularis and the position of the arm over the opposite shoulder in RCT of the infraspinatus. Sham ultrasound therapy will be applied in the same way as ultrasound therapy, using a frequency of 0 Hz, intensity 0 W / cm2, 10 min per treatment. All respondents will conduct IMG that includes: unloading pendular exercises if strength exercises cannot be started immediately, shoulder range exercises, and rotator cuff and scapula stabilizer exercises for 30 minutes per treatment. The physiotherapist will apply ultrasound therapy and sham ultrasound therapy by slow circular motions through a neutral gel and perform IMG. The respondent and the researcher will not know in which group the subject was randomized. The first group will receive ultrasound therapy and IMG, and the second sham ultrasound therapy and identical IMG for four weeks (5 therapies per week, a total of 20 therapies). The researcher will perform a standardized ultrasound examination of the shoulder of all respondents immediately before and immediately after the therapeutic intervention, measuring the size of the calcification. Another examiner will make an independent measurement of the calcification size. The final measure will take the average value of the two. The researcher will record a positive PD in the tendon around the calcification (on a scale of 0-3), assess the severity of shoulder pain at rest, at night and when moving using a visual analog scale of pain (VAS-pain; 0-10), measure passive and active shoulder mobility (goniometer in degrees), rotator cuff muscle strength (manual muscle test; 0-5), handgrip strength (hydraulic dynamometer in kg) and assess functional status using the Shoulder Pain and Disability Index (SPADI)). All respondents will be assessed the overall satisfaction of the therapeutic intervention using a five-point Likert scale. The primary outcome of the study will be the change in calcification size measured by D-US before and after the intervention, while other outcome parameters are: reduction of pain, an increase of shoulder mobility, improvement of functional status, and overall satisfaction with rehabilitation. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04822779
Study type Interventional
Source Clinical Hospital Centre Zagreb
Contact Stjepan Cota, MD
Phone +385917683917
Email stjepancota@yahoo.com
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date April 2021
Completion date January 2023

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