Effects of Ultrasound-Guided Peritendinous and Intrabursal Corticosteroid Injections on Shoulder Tendon Elasticity: A Post Hoc Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial

The study aimed to investigate whether the shoulder tendons changed their elasticity after ultrasound-guided peritendinous or intrabursal corticosteroid injections. Post hoc secondary analysis of a double-blinded, randomized controlled study with 3 months of follow-up. Outpatient rehabilitation clin...

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Published inArchives of physical medicine and rehabilitation Vol. 102; no. 5; pp. 905 - 913
Main Authors Hsu, Po-Cheng, Chang, Ke-Vin, Wu, Wei-Ting, Wang, Jia-Chi, Özçakar, Levent
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.05.2021
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Summary:The study aimed to investigate whether the shoulder tendons changed their elasticity after ultrasound-guided peritendinous or intrabursal corticosteroid injections. Post hoc secondary analysis of a double-blinded, randomized controlled study with 3 months of follow-up. Outpatient rehabilitation clinic. Patients with subacromial impingement syndrome (N=60). Patients with unilateral shoulder pain were randomly assigned to receive standard ultrasound-guided subacromial or dual-target corticosteroid injections. The supraspinatus tendons were exposed to 40 mg triamcinolone acetonide in the formal group, whereas the long head of the biceps brachii tendons (LHBT) and supraspinatus tendons were individually infiltrated by 20 mg triamcinolone acetonide in the latter group. Patients’ bilateral shoulders were divided into group 1 (n=30, receiving standard subacromial injections), group 2 (n=30, receiving dual-target injections), and group 3 (n=60, without injections). Strain ratio of LHBT and supraspinatus tendons using ultrasound elastography. The repeated-measures analysis of variance revealed no intragroup difference of the strain ratio of the LHBT (P=.412 for group 1, P=.936 for group 2, P=.131 for group 3) and supraspinatus tendon (P=.309 for group 1, P=.067 for group 2, P=.860 for group 3) across the 3 time points. Treating group 3 as the reference, the linear mixed model revealed no significant changes in tendon elasticity after either the standard subacromial injection (P=.205 for the LHBT and P=.529 for the supraspinatus tendon) or the dual-target injection (P=.961 for the LHBT and P=.831 for the supraspinatus tendon). Elasticity of the LHBT and supraspinatus tendons is unlikely to change after a single dose of peritendinous or intrabursal corticosteroid injections. Future studies with a shorter follow-up interval are needed to validate whether corticosteroid injections can cause transient changes of the tendon’s elasticity.
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ISSN:0003-9993
1532-821X
DOI:10.1016/j.apmr.2020.11.011