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New options in the management of tendinopathy

Tendon injuries can be acute or chronic, and caused by intrinsic or extrinsic factors, either alone or in combination. Tendinopathies are a common cause of disability in occupational medicine and account for a substantial proportion of overuse injuries in sports. Tendinopathy is essentially a failed...

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Autores principales: Maffulli, Nicola, Longo, Umile Giuseppe, Loppini, Mattia, Spiezia, Filippo, Denaro, Vincenzo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3781852/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24198540
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author Maffulli, Nicola
Longo, Umile Giuseppe
Loppini, Mattia
Spiezia, Filippo
Denaro, Vincenzo
author_facet Maffulli, Nicola
Longo, Umile Giuseppe
Loppini, Mattia
Spiezia, Filippo
Denaro, Vincenzo
author_sort Maffulli, Nicola
collection PubMed
description Tendon injuries can be acute or chronic, and caused by intrinsic or extrinsic factors, either alone or in combination. Tendinopathies are a common cause of disability in occupational medicine and account for a substantial proportion of overuse injuries in sports. Tendinopathy is essentially a failed healing response, with haphazard proliferation of tenocytes, abnormalities in tenocytes, with disruption of collagen fibres and subsequent increase in noncollagenous matrix. The scientific evidence base for managing tendinopathies is limited. What may appear clinically as an “acute tendinopathy” is actually a well advanced failure of a chronic healing response in which there is neither histologic nor biochemical evidence of inflammation. In this review we report the new options for the management of tendinopathy, including eccentric exercises, extracorporeal shockwave therapy, injections (intratendinous injections of corticosteroids, aprotinin, polidocanol platelet-rich plasma, autologous blood injection, high-volume injections) and surgery. Open surgery aims to excise fibrotic adhesions, remove areas of failed healing and make multiple longitudinal incisions in the tendon to detect intratendinous lesions, and to restore vascularity and possibly stimulate the remaining viable cells to initiate cell matrix response and healing. New surgical techniques aim to disrupt the abnormal neoinnervation to interfere with the pain sensation caused by tendinopathy. These procedures are intrinsically different from the classical ones in present use, because they do not attempt to address directly the pathologic lesion, but act only to denervate them. They include endoscopy, electrocoagulation, and minimally invasive stripping. Further randomized controlled trials are necessary to clarify better the best therapeutic options for the management of tendinopathy.
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spelling pubmed-37818522013-11-06 New options in the management of tendinopathy Maffulli, Nicola Longo, Umile Giuseppe Loppini, Mattia Spiezia, Filippo Denaro, Vincenzo Open Access J Sports Med Mini–Review Tendon injuries can be acute or chronic, and caused by intrinsic or extrinsic factors, either alone or in combination. Tendinopathies are a common cause of disability in occupational medicine and account for a substantial proportion of overuse injuries in sports. Tendinopathy is essentially a failed healing response, with haphazard proliferation of tenocytes, abnormalities in tenocytes, with disruption of collagen fibres and subsequent increase in noncollagenous matrix. The scientific evidence base for managing tendinopathies is limited. What may appear clinically as an “acute tendinopathy” is actually a well advanced failure of a chronic healing response in which there is neither histologic nor biochemical evidence of inflammation. In this review we report the new options for the management of tendinopathy, including eccentric exercises, extracorporeal shockwave therapy, injections (intratendinous injections of corticosteroids, aprotinin, polidocanol platelet-rich plasma, autologous blood injection, high-volume injections) and surgery. Open surgery aims to excise fibrotic adhesions, remove areas of failed healing and make multiple longitudinal incisions in the tendon to detect intratendinous lesions, and to restore vascularity and possibly stimulate the remaining viable cells to initiate cell matrix response and healing. New surgical techniques aim to disrupt the abnormal neoinnervation to interfere with the pain sensation caused by tendinopathy. These procedures are intrinsically different from the classical ones in present use, because they do not attempt to address directly the pathologic lesion, but act only to denervate them. They include endoscopy, electrocoagulation, and minimally invasive stripping. Further randomized controlled trials are necessary to clarify better the best therapeutic options for the management of tendinopathy. Dove Medical Press 2010-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC3781852/ /pubmed/24198540 Text en © 2010 Maffulli et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Mini–Review
Maffulli, Nicola
Longo, Umile Giuseppe
Loppini, Mattia
Spiezia, Filippo
Denaro, Vincenzo
New options in the management of tendinopathy
title New options in the management of tendinopathy
title_full New options in the management of tendinopathy
title_fullStr New options in the management of tendinopathy
title_full_unstemmed New options in the management of tendinopathy
title_short New options in the management of tendinopathy
title_sort new options in the management of tendinopathy
topic Mini–Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3781852/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24198540
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