Physical Therapy Division, Department of Community and Family Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
J Shoulder Elbow Surg. 2010 Sep;19(6):795-801. doi: 10.1016/j.jse.2010.03.014. Epub 2010 Jul 24.
Shoulder pain is a common, costly, and recalcitrant affliction. One treatment for shoulder pain is intra-articular injection of corticosteroid. Clinical opinion is that injection guided by palpation is accurate and effective, and there is some evidence to support a positive effect of injection on pain. However, great controversy exists as to the accuracy of injection by palpation, whether or not accuracy is important, and what the effect is of accuracy on pain.
We used a blinded, longitudinal observational design of effectiveness in an effort to determine the accuracy of intra-articular injections and the effect of that accuracy on pain and functional outcomes in patients with various shoulder pathologies.
Injection accuracy data were captured on 103 patients. Of the 103 blinded injections, 54 received injections that were identified by fluoroscopy as "in" the capsule, whereas 49 were identified as "outside" the capsule; an accuracy rate of 52.4%. In the 4-week follow up, regardless of group assignment or accuracy of the injection, patients improved significantly (P < .01) from pre- to post-injection. Improvement was typically over by 2.5 points in the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS) categories, over 8 points on the Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire (SFMPQ), and over by 13 points on the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand questionnaire (DASH).
Our accuracy rate was within the range reported in the literature. Improvements in all subjects with regard to pain and self-reported function occurred even in light of a wide variance in subject duration of symptoms, multiple injectors with varied training, a blinded approach to injection, and multiple injection approaches.
The accuracy of the injection does not appear to depend on the experience of the physician and may be irrelevant in treating shoulder pain of multiple origins.
肩部疼痛是一种常见的、代价高昂且难以治愈的疾病。治疗肩部疼痛的一种方法是在关节内注射皮质类固醇。临床观点认为,通过触诊引导的注射是准确有效的,并且有一些证据支持注射对疼痛有积极的影响。然而,触诊引导注射的准确性、准确性是否重要以及准确性对疼痛的影响存在很大争议。
我们采用了一种盲法、纵向观察性设计,以确定关节内注射的准确性,以及这种准确性对各种肩部病变患者的疼痛和功能结果的影响。
对 103 名患者的注射准确性数据进行了采集。在 103 次盲注中,54 次被荧光透视法确认为“在”囊内,而 49 次被确认为“在”囊外;准确率为 52.4%。在 4 周的随访中,无论分组或注射的准确性如何,患者在注射后从预治疗到治疗后都有显著改善(P<.01)。在数字疼痛评分量表(NPRS)类别中,疼痛通常改善了 2.5 分,在简化麦克吉尔疼痛问卷(SFMPQ)中改善了 8 分,在手臂、肩部和手部残疾问卷(DASH)中改善了 13 分。
我们的准确率在文献报道的范围内。所有受试者的疼痛和自我报告的功能都有所改善,即使考虑到受试者症状持续时间的广泛差异、不同培训背景的多个注射者、注射的盲法方法以及多种注射方法。
注射的准确性似乎并不取决于医生的经验,对于治疗多种来源的肩部疼痛可能并不重要。