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British Journal of Sports Medicine 2018-Oct

Topical glyceryl trinitrate for the treatment of tendinopathies: a systematic review.

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Dimitris Challoumas
Paul D Kirwan
Dmytro Borysov
Christopher Clifford
Michael McLean
Neal L Millar

Palabras clave

Abstracto

OBJECTIVE

To produce a best evidence synthesis of the clinical effects of topical glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) in the treatment of tendinopathies.

METHODS

A systematic review of published randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of the use of GTN in patients with tendinopathy.

METHODS

MEDLINE, Embase, Scopus and CINAHL from database inception to January 2018.

METHODS

We examined RCTs comparing the effects of topical GTN with either placebo or other treatments on tendinopathy. Overall quality of each eligible study was determined based on a combined assessment of internal validity, external validity and precision. The level of evidence for each assessed parameter was rated based on the system by van Tulder et al.

RESULTS

A total of 10 eligible RCTs were identified including patients with tendinopathy of the rotator cuff (n=4), wrist extensors (n=3), Achilles (n=2) and patellar (n=1) tendons. For all tendinopathies, improvements in pain were significant when comparing GTN versus placebo in the short term (<8 weeks; poor evidence). Significant improvements in midterm outcomes for treatment with GTN versus placebo included the following: patient satisfaction (strong evidence); chances of being asymptomatic with activities of daily living (strong evidence); range of movement (moderate evidence); strength (moderate evidence); pain (at night and with activity; poor evidence) and local tenderness (poor evidence). Patients treated with topical GTN reported a higher incidence of headaches than those who received placebo (moderate evidence).

CONCLUSIONS

Treatment of tendinopathies with topical GTN for up to 6 months appears to be superior to placebo and may therefore be a useful adjunct to the treating healthcare professions.

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