Lateral Epicondyle Tendinopathy Toolkit: Section D - Summary of the Evidence: Difference between revisions

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| '''Chronic'''
| '''Chronic'''
|-
|-
! scope="row" | '''Clinical research evidence'''  
! scope="row" | '''Clinical research evidence*'''  
| No  
|  
No
 
|  
|  
Yes
• 4 RCT<br>• 5 SR (21)<br>• 1 CAT (5)


1CS<ref name="Voorn 1998">Voorn, R. Case report: can sacroiliac joint dysfunction cause chronic Achilles tendonitis? JOSPT. 1998;27(6);436‐443.</ref>
• 1 wrist RCT


|-
|-
! scope="row" | '''Published expert opinion'''  
! scope="row" | '''Published expert opinion'''  
| Yes<ref name="Carcia 2010">Carcia CR, Martin RL, Houck J, Wukich DK. Achilles pain, stiffness, and muscle power deficits: achilles tendinitis. J Orthop Sports Phys Therapy. 2010;40(9)A1‐A26.</ref>
|  
| Yes<ref name="Carcia 2010" />
No
 
|
2 expert opinion&nbsp;narrative&nbsp;reviews
 
|-
|-
! scope="row" | '''Take home message'''  
! scope="row" | '''Take home message'''  
| There is no clinical evidence but there is expert&nbsp;level consensus to <u>support</u>&nbsp;the use of joint mobilizations in the acute stage if assessment&nbsp;reveals joint restriction.  
|  
| There is a small amount of clinical evidence and&nbsp;more substantial expert level consensus to <u>support&nbsp;</u>the use of joint mobilizations in the chronic stage if&nbsp;assessment reveals joint restriction.
There is <u>no clinical evidence to support or refute</u> the use of elbow mobilization in the acute stage.
 
|
There is a <u>large amount</u> of clinical evidence to <u>support </u>the use of elbow mobilizations for short term effects. There is a small amount of evidence that supports long-term effects.<br>
 
There is a <u>small amount</u> of clinical evidence to <u>support </u>the use of radial head mobilization and neural tension techniques.<br>
 
There is weak support for the use of wrist MWM.
 
|-
|-
! scope="row" | '''[[Achilles Tendinopathy Toolkit: Summary of Interventions#Explanation_of_clinical_implications|Clinical implication]]'''  
! scope="row" | '''[[Achilles Tendinopathy Toolkit: Summary of Interventions#Explanation_of_clinical_implications|Clinical implication]]'''  
| <u>May consider</u>&nbsp;using manual therapy in the acute stage&nbsp;after undertaking a comprehensive biomechanical&nbsp;evaluation of the ‐ Joint mobs hip, knee, foot and ankle.  
|  
| <u>May consider</u> using manual therapy in the chronic stage<br>after undertaking a comprehensive biomechanical<br>evaluation of the hip, knee, foot and ankle.
There is <u>no direction provided</u> by the literature on the use of elbow mobilization in the management of acute LET.
 
|  
<u>Strongly consider</u> using MWM of the elbow as part of a multimodal treatment regime (manual therapy and exercise) in the treatment of chronic LET. The effects should be apparent within the first few treatments. (See Appendix B for details)<br>
 
<u>Consider</u>&nbsp;<u></u>using radial head mobilization and neural tension techniques.<br>
 
<u>Consider</u> using MWM of the wrist as part of multimodal treatment regime.
 
|-
|-
! colspan="3" scope="row" |  
! colspan="3" scope="row" |  
'''Spinal Mobilization Techniques'''
'''Spinal Mobilization Techniques'''  


|-
|-
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| '''Chronic'''
| '''Chronic'''
|-
|-
! scope="row" | '''Clinical research evidence'''  
! scope="row" | '''Clinical research evidence*'''  
| No  
|  
| Yes<br>1 SR<ref>Brosseau L, Casimiro L, Milne S. et al. Deep transverse friction massage for treating tendinitis. 2002. Cochrane Database Systematic Reviews. 4.</ref><br>2 CS<ref name="Woodman 1982">Woodman RM, Pare L. Evaluation and treatment of soft tissue lesions of the ankle and forefoot using a Cyriax approach. Physical Therapy. 1982;62(8);1144‐47.</ref><ref name="Christenson 2007">Christenson RE. Effectiveness of specific soft tissue mobilizations for the management of Achilles tendinosis: Single case study‐ Experimental design. Manual Therap. 2007;12;63‐71.</ref>
No
 
| <br>
|-
|-
! scope="row" | '''Published expert opinion'''  
! scope="row" | '''Published expert opinion'''  
| No  
|  
| Yes<ref name="Carcia 2010" />
No
 
| <br>
|-
|-
! scope="row" | '''Take home message'''  
! scope="row" | '''Take home message'''  
| The clinical evidence neither supports nor refutes&nbsp;the use of frictions in the acute stage.  
|  
There is no clinical evidence or expert opinion on the use of spinal mobilization for patients with acute LET.
 
| There is a small amount of clinical evidence to <u>support</u> the use of soft tissue techniques, such as&nbsp;frictions, in the chronic stage.
| There is a small amount of clinical evidence to <u>support</u> the use of soft tissue techniques, such as&nbsp;frictions, in the chronic stage.
|-
|-
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'''[[Achilles Tendinopathy Toolkit: Summary of Interventions#Explanation_of_clinical_implications|Clinical implication]]'''  
'''[[Achilles Tendinopathy Toolkit: Summary of Interventions#Explanation_of_clinical_implications|Clinical implication]]'''  


| <u>May consider</u> using manual therapy in the acute stage after undertaking a comprehensive biomechanical&nbsp;evaluation of the ‐ Joint mobs hip, knee, foot and ankle.  
| <u></u>There is no direction provided by the literature on the use of spinal mobilization in the management of acute LET.  
| <u>May consider</u> a trial of soft tissue techniques, such as<br>frictions, in the chronic stage.  
| <u>May consider</u> a trial of soft tissue techniques, such as<br>frictions, in the chronic stage.
'''Elbow Joint Mobilizations'''''<br>''  
|-
! colspan="3" scope="row" |
'''Soft Tissue Techniques'''''<br>''  


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| '''Chronic'''
| '''Chronic'''
|-
|-
! scope="row" | '''Clinical research evidence'''  
! scope="row" | '''Clinical research evidence*'''  
| No  
| No  
|  
|  
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CS ‐ Case studies; SR ‐ Systematic reviews.
LET = Lateral Epidocndyle Tendinopathy; RCT = Randomized Control Trial; SR ‐ Systematic Review; CAT = Critically Appraised Topic; MWM = Mobilization With Movement
 
''*Numbers in parentheses in the&nbsp;"Clinical Research Evidence" column represent the number of individual studies included in each review article.''


== Title<br>  ==
== Title<br>  ==

Revision as of 01:06, 26 July 2013

PURPOSE, SCOPE & DISCLAIMER: The purpose of this document is to provide physical therapists with a summary of the evidence for interventions commonly used to manage tendinopathy of the lateral epicondyle. This decision-making tool is evidence-informed and where there is insufficient evidence, expert-informed. It is not intended to replace the clinician’s clinical reasoning skills and inter-professional collaboration. ‘Acute’ refers primarily to symptoms of less than 3 months duration and ‘chronic’ to greater than 3 months. For studies which (1) included participants with symptoms that encompassed both acute and chronic stages or (2) did not clarify the duration of symptoms, the results have been reported within the ‘chronic’ stage.

Lateral Epicondyle Tendinopathy:
Summary of the Evidence for Physical Therapy Interventions
[edit | edit source]

Manual Therapy[edit | edit source]

Elbow Joint Mobilizations

Stage of pathology Acute Chronic
Clinical research evidence*

No

• 4 RCT
• 5 SR (21)
• 1 CAT (5)

• 1 wrist RCT

Published expert opinion

No

2 expert opinion narrative reviews

Take home message

There is no clinical evidence to support or refute the use of elbow mobilization in the acute stage.

There is a large amount of clinical evidence to support the use of elbow mobilizations for short term effects. There is a small amount of evidence that supports long-term effects.

There is a small amount of clinical evidence to support the use of radial head mobilization and neural tension techniques.

There is weak support for the use of wrist MWM.

Clinical implication

There is no direction provided by the literature on the use of elbow mobilization in the management of acute LET.

Strongly consider using MWM of the elbow as part of a multimodal treatment regime (manual therapy and exercise) in the treatment of chronic LET. The effects should be apparent within the first few treatments. (See Appendix B for details)

Consider using radial head mobilization and neural tension techniques.

Consider using MWM of the wrist as part of multimodal treatment regime.

Spinal Mobilization Techniques

Stage of pathology Acute Chronic
Clinical research evidence*

No


Published expert opinion

No


Take home message

There is no clinical evidence or expert opinion on the use of spinal mobilization for patients with acute LET.

There is a small amount of clinical evidence to support the use of soft tissue techniques, such as frictions, in the chronic stage.

Clinical implication

There is no direction provided by the literature on the use of spinal mobilization in the management of acute LET. May consider a trial of soft tissue techniques, such as
frictions, in the chronic stage.

Soft Tissue Techniques

Stage of pathology Acute Chronic
Clinical research evidence* No

Yes

1CS[1]

Published expert opinion Yes[2] Yes[2]
Take home message There is no clinical evidence but there is expert level consensus to support the use of joint mobilizations in the acute stage if assessment reveals joint restriction. There is a small amount of clinical evidence and more substantial expert level consensus to support the use of joint mobilizations in the chronic stage if assessment reveals joint restriction.
Clinical implication May consider using manual therapy in the acute stage after undertaking a comprehensive biomechanical evaluation of the ‐ Joint mobs hip, knee, foot and ankle. May consider using manual therapy in the chronic stage
after undertaking a comprehensive biomechanical
evaluation of the hip, knee, foot and ankle.

LET = Lateral Epidocndyle Tendinopathy; RCT = Randomized Control Trial; SR ‐ Systematic Review; CAT = Critically Appraised Topic; MWM = Mobilization With Movement

*Numbers in parentheses in the "Clinical Research Evidence" column represent the number of individual studies included in each review article.

Title
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Author/s
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names of all author

Abstract
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Background
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or context

Objectives
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the clinical question or purpose

Data sources
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Study selection or eligibility criteria
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participants and interventions

Study appraisal and synthesis methods
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or Data Extraction and Data Synthesis

Results
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Key findings

Limitations
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Limitations of the study

Conclusion
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and implications of key findings

Funding and Declerations
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funding for the systematic review and any potential conflicts of interest

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if appropriate

Author Biography
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References[edit | edit source]

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  1. Voorn, R. Case report: can sacroiliac joint dysfunction cause chronic Achilles tendonitis? JOSPT. 1998;27(6);436‐443.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Carcia CR, Martin RL, Houck J, Wukich DK. Achilles pain, stiffness, and muscle power deficits: achilles tendinitis. J Orthop Sports Phys Therapy. 2010;40(9)A1‐A26.