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用于肩袖疾病的电疗法

Electrotherapy modalities for rotator cuff disease.

作者信息

Page Matthew J, Green Sally, Mrocki Marshall A, Surace Stephen J, Deitch Jessica, McBain Brodwen, Lyttle Nicolette, Buchbinder Rachelle

机构信息

School of Public Health & Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Level 1, 549 St Kilda Road, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 3004.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Jun 10;2016(6):CD012225. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012225.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Management of rotator cuff disease may include use of electrotherapy modalities (also known as electrophysical agents), which aim to reduce pain and improve function via an increase in energy (electrical, sound, light, or thermal) into the body. Examples include therapeutic ultrasound, low-level laser therapy (LLLT), transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), and pulsed electromagnetic field therapy (PEMF). These modalities are usually delivered as components of a physical therapy intervention. This review is one of a series of reviews that form an update of the Cochrane review, 'Physiotherapy interventions for shoulder pain'.

OBJECTIVES

To synthesise available evidence regarding the benefits and harms of electrotherapy modalities for the treatment of people with rotator cuff disease.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL; 2015, Issue 3), Ovid MEDLINE (January 1966 to March 2015), Ovid EMBASE (January 1980 to March 2015), CINAHL Plus (EBSCOhost, January 1937 to March 2015), ClinicalTrials.gov and the WHO ICTRP clinical trials registries up to March 2015, unrestricted by language, and reviewed the reference lists of review articles and retrieved trials, to identify potentially relevant trials.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and quasi-randomised trials, including adults with rotator cuff disease (e.g. subacromial impingement syndrome, rotator cuff tendinitis, calcific tendinitis), and comparing any electrotherapy modality with placebo, no intervention, a different electrotherapy modality or any other intervention (e.g. glucocorticoid injection). Trials investigating whether electrotherapy modalities were more effective than placebo or no treatment, or were an effective addition to another physical therapy intervention (e.g. manual therapy or exercise) were the main comparisons of interest. Main outcomes of interest were overall pain, function, pain on motion, patient-reported global assessment of treatment success, quality of life and the number of participants experiencing adverse events.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Two review authors independently selected trials for inclusion, extracted the data, performed a risk of bias assessment and assessed the quality of the body of evidence for the main outcomes using the GRADE approach.

MAIN RESULTS

We included 47 trials (2388 participants). Most trials (n = 43) included participants with rotator cuff disease without calcification (four trials included people with calcific tendinitis). Sixteen (34%) trials investigated the effect of an electrotherapy modality delivered in isolation. Only 23% were rated at low risk of allocation bias, and 49% were rated at low risk of both performance and detection bias (for self-reported outcomes). The trials were heterogeneous in terms of population, intervention and comparator, so none of the data could be combined in a meta-analysis.In one trial (61 participants; low quality evidence), pulsed therapeutic ultrasound (three to five times a week for six weeks) was compared with placebo (inactive ultrasound therapy) for calcific tendinitis. At six weeks, the mean reduction in overall pain with placebo was -6.3 points on a 52-point scale, and -14.9 points with ultrasound (MD -8.60 points, 95% CI -13.48 to -3.72 points; absolute risk difference 17%, 7% to 26% more). Mean improvement in function with placebo was 3.7 points on a 100-point scale, and 17.8 points with ultrasound (mean difference (MD) 14.10 points, 95% confidence interval (CI) 5.39 to 22.81 points; absolute risk difference 14%, 5% to 23% more). Ninety-one per cent (29/32) of participants reported treatment success with ultrasound compared with 52% (15/29) of participants receiving placebo (risk ratio (RR) 1.75, 95% CI 1.21 to 2.53; absolute risk difference 39%, 18% to 60% more). Mean improvement in quality of life with placebo was 0.40 points on a 10-point scale, and 2.60 points with ultrasound (MD 2.20 points, 95% CI 0.91 points to 3.49 points; absolute risk difference 22%, 9% to 35% more). Between-group differences were not important at nine months. No participant reported adverse events.Therapeutic ultrasound produced no clinically important additional benefits when combined with other physical therapy interventions (eight clinically heterogeneous trials, low quality evidence). We are uncertain whether there are differences in patient-important outcomes between ultrasound and other active interventions (manual therapy, acupuncture, glucocorticoid injection, glucocorticoid injection plus oral tolmetin sodium, or exercise) because the quality of evidence is very low. Two placebo-controlled trials reported results favouring LLLT up to three weeks (low quality evidence), however combining LLLT with other physical therapy interventions produced few additional benefits (10 clinically heterogeneous trials, low quality evidence). We are uncertain whether transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) is more or less effective than glucocorticoid injection with respect to pain, function, global treatment success and active range of motion because of the very low quality evidence from a single trial. In other single, small trials, no clinically important benefits of pulsed electromagnetic field therapy (PEMF), microcurrent electrical stimulation (MENS), acetic acid iontophoresis and microwave diathermy were observed (low or very low quality evidence).No adverse events of therapeutic ultrasound, LLLT, TENS or microwave diathermy were reported by any participants. Adverse events were not measured in any trials investigating the effects of PEMF, MENS or acetic acid iontophoresis.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Based on low quality evidence, therapeutic ultrasound may have short-term benefits over placebo in people with calcific tendinitis, and LLLT may have short-term benefits over placebo in people with rotator cuff disease. Further high quality placebo-controlled trials are needed to confirm these results. In contrast, based on low quality evidence, PEMF may not provide clinically relevant benefits over placebo, and therapeutic ultrasound, LLLT and PEMF may not provide additional benefits when combined with other physical therapy interventions. We are uncertain whether TENS is superior to placebo, and whether any electrotherapy modality provides benefits over other active interventions (e.g. glucocorticoid injection) because of the very low quality of the evidence. Practitioners should communicate the uncertainty of these effects and consider other approaches or combinations of treatment. Further trials of electrotherapy modalities for rotator cuff disease should be based upon a strong rationale and consideration of whether or not they would alter the conclusions of this review.

摘要

背景

肩袖疾病的治疗可能包括使用电疗法(也称为电物理因子),其旨在通过增加进入身体的能量(电、声、光或热)来减轻疼痛并改善功能。示例包括治疗性超声、低强度激光疗法(LLLT)、经皮电刺激神经疗法(TENS)和脉冲电磁场疗法(PEMF)。这些疗法通常作为物理治疗干预的组成部分进行实施。本综述是构成Cochrane综述“肩痛的物理治疗干预”更新内容的一系列综述之一。

目的

综合关于电疗法治疗肩袖疾病患者的益处和危害的现有证据。

检索方法

我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL;2015年第3期)、Ovid MEDLINE(1966年1月至2015年3月)、Ovid EMBASE(1980年1月至2015年3月)、CINAHL Plus(EBSCOhost,1937年1月至2015年3月)、ClinicalTrials.gov以及截至2015年3月的世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台,不受语言限制,并查阅了综述文章和检索到的试验的参考文献列表,以识别潜在相关试验。

选择标准

我们纳入了随机对照试验(RCT)和半随机试验,包括患有肩袖疾病的成年人(例如肩峰下撞击综合征、肩袖肌腱炎、钙化性肌腱炎),并将任何电疗法与安慰剂、无干预、不同的电疗法或任何其他干预(例如糖皮质激素注射)进行比较。研究电疗法是否比安慰剂或无治疗更有效,或是否是另一种物理治疗干预(例如手法治疗或运动)的有效补充的试验是主要的感兴趣比较。主要感兴趣的结局是总体疼痛、功能、运动时疼痛、患者报告的治疗成功总体评估、生活质量以及经历不良事件的参与者数量。

数据收集与分析

两位综述作者独立选择纳入试验、提取数据、进行偏倚风险评估,并使用GRADE方法评估主要结局的证据质量。

主要结果

我们纳入了47项试验(2388名参与者)。大多数试验(n = 43)纳入了无钙化的肩袖疾病参与者(四项试验纳入了钙化性肌腱炎患者)。16项(34%)试验研究了单独使用电疗法的效果。只有23%被评为分配偏倚低风险,49%被评为表现和检测偏倚低风险(对于自我报告的结局)。试验在人群、干预和对照方面存在异质性,因此没有数据可以合并进行荟萃分析。在一项试验(61名参与者;低质量证据)中,将脉冲治疗性超声(每周三至五次,共六周)与安慰剂(无效超声治疗)用于钙化性肌腱炎进行比较。在六周时,安慰剂组总体疼痛的平均降低在52分制上为 -6.3分,超声组为 -14.9分(平均差(MD) -8.60分,95%置信区间(CI) -13.48至 -3.72分;绝对风险差17%,多7%至26%)。安慰剂组功能的平均改善在100分制上为

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