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Efficacy of extracorporeal shockwave therapy on pain and function in myofascial pain syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials [with consumer summary] |
Avendano-Lopez C, Megia-Garcia A, Beltran-Alacreu H, Serrano-Munoz D, Arroyo-Fernandez R, Comino-Suarez N, Avendano-Coy J |
American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation 2024 Feb;103(2):89-98 |
systematic review |
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study is to examine the effectiveness of extracorporeal shockwave therapy in reducing pain, improving functionality, joint range of motion, quality of life, fatigue, and health status self-perception in people with myofascial pain syndrome. METHODS: PubMed, the Cochrane Library, CINAHL, the Physiotherapy Evidence Database, and SPORTDiscus were systematically searched for only randomized clinical trials published up to June 2, 2022. The main outcome variables were pain, as reported on the visual analog scale and pressure pain threshold, and functionality. A quantitative analysis was conducted using the inverse variance method and the random effects model. RESULTS: Twenty-seven studies were included (N = 595 participants in the extracorporeal shockwave therapy group). The effectiveness of extracorporeal shockwave therapy for relieving pain was superior for the extracorporeal shockwave therapy group compared with the control group on the visual analog scale (MD -1.7 cm; 95% confidence interval -2.2 to -1.1) and pressure pain threshold (mean difference 1.1 kg/cm2; 95% confidence interval 0.4 to 1.7) and functionality (standardized mean difference -0.8; 95% confidence interval -1.6 to -0.04) with high heterogeneity. However, no differences were found between extracorporeal shockwave therapy and other interventions as dry needling, exercises, infiltrations, and lasers interventions. CONCLUSIONS: Extracorporeal shockwave therapy is effective in relieving pain and improving functionality in patients with myofascial pain syndrome compared with control and ultrasound therapy.
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