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Shocking
Relief: New Therapy Eases the Chronic Pain of Many Common Tendon
Injuries
By Vicki Hyman
Tuesday, March 22, 2005
article from Newark
Star-Ledger
Mary
Jean Lange's first steps each morning were so excruciating that
the Hackensack teacher resorted to crawling to the bathroom. Betty
Davis, an Irvington nurse, felt like the soles of her feet had been
branded. Jean Smitchger, a retired businesswoman from Cornwall,
N.Y., dredged up only two little words to describe the pain: "all
hell."
The
three women suffered from plantar fasciitis, a swelling of the tough
tissue on the bottom of the feet. Seen often among workers who have
to stand on hard surfaces all day, it strikes about 2.5 million
people a year. For most patients, rest, ice, stretching, special
insoles or cortisone shots do the trick, but for these women, nothing
short of surgery seemed to help.
Finally,
their podiatrists recommended a new treatment for chronic heel pain
called extracorporeal shock wave therapy. An ESWT machine sends
acoustic waves into the foot, which bruises the already battered
tissue. Doctors believe that these new microscopic tears promote
the growth of new blood vessels, effectively jump-starting healing
that had been stalled.
Davis
just calls it "my miracle."
First
used in the Europe to break up kidney stones, shock wave therapy
jumped the pond in the 1980s and now is standard care for kidney
stone sufferers. Since the Food and Drug Administration approved
the first ESWT machine for treatment of plantar fasciitis in 2000,
the therapy has taken off. Without the risk or complications of
surgery, most patients are back on their feet within a day or so,
some reporting immediate relief.
Now
doctors use shock waves to repair many common tendon injuries, including
tennis elbow, Achilles tendinitis, shoulder, knee and wrist tendinitis,
and trigger finger, reporting success rates of about 80 percent.
Some
major insurance companies, however, do not cover the treatment or
cover it only for some tendon injuries. Aetna deems it "experimental"
and will not pay for it. Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield covers the
therapy for plantar fasciitis only. The cost runs about $2,000 to
$3,500.
But
research in Europe and Japan shows shock wave therapy holds further
promise. Doctors have been using it to heal diabetic ulcers and
to fix bone fractures that have not healed properly, which alleviates
the need for complicated and painful bone grafts, said podiatrist
Kimberly Eickmeier, a spokeswoman for the American College of Foot
and Ankle Surgeons and an adviser to the International Society for
Musculoskeletal Shockwave Therapy.
A
Japanese study published last year in the journal Circulation showed
that shock waves repaired heart damage in pigs, suggesting that
it could be used to help healing in humans after heart attacks.
The
German firm Dornier developed medical shock wave technology after
aircraft engineers noticed pitting in the aluminum of the stabilizer
wings of airplanes breaking the sound barrier. Legend (among medical
historians, at least) has it that one of the engineers mentioned
the phenomenon to a surgeon over a beer, and they speculated that
shock waves could be used to break up kidney stones.
Later,
a patient in Europe who was to be treated with shock waves for his
gallstones asked the surgeon to test the machine on his heel pain,
and the doctor did, according to Eickmeier. (Picture that in America:
"Dude, while you're fixing my eyes, how about zapping my hernia
with that laser?" ) It worked, and word about the treatment
spread quickly.
Doctors
typically recommend the procedure if patients are still in pain
after six months of conventional therapy. The outpatient procedure
takes only 10 to 20 minutes, longer if the patient must be sedated
first. The injured area is coated with gel and placed against the
therapy head, a rubber dome filled with water. The machine generates
sound waves that emanate through the membrane and into the injured
area.
Two
types of machines, the HealthTronics OssaTron and the Dornier EPOS
Ultra, target the injured area with high energy sound waves. This
can be painful -- the feeling has been likened to getting hit with
a baseball bat -- so a nerve block is applied to the injured area.
Many patients also undergo "twilight sedation" -- in which
patients remain conscious -- to avoid discomfort. The one-time treatment
usually takes place in a hospital or surgery center.
Another
machine, the Siemens Sonocur Basic, uses low-energy sound waves,
so it can be performed without anesthesia in a doctor's office.
It usually takes three visits to repair the damage.
The
success rate compares with that of surgery, but it does not carry
the risk of infection or require stitches. Patients typically get
back to their normal routines much faster.
"The
worst thing that happens here is it doesn't work," said Maplewood
podiatrist Howard Hyman, as he watched technicians administer the
treatment to a patient's right foot (the one with YES written on
it) earlier this month at the Surgical Center at Millburn.
There's
actually one thing that's worse: Paying out-of-pocket for the treatment
and it doesn't work. Although proponents say they see shock wave
therapy becoming standard care for tendon injuries, particularly
among worker's compensation cases, many insurers will not cover
the procedure.
Some
patients who got their tennis elbow by actually playing tennis --
as opposed to working stiffs who got their injuries by cutting meat,
fixing plumbing or painting houses -- don't balk at paying for the
treatment themselves.
After
the pain in her foot pushed her into a wheelchair, Smitchger was
more than willing to gamble $3,500. "I was at my wit's end,"
she said. "I'd try anything."
There
is nothing about the treatment, however, that can prevent the patient
from reinjuring the tendon. Doctors recommend ways to avoid reinjury,
from losing weight for a heel pain sufferer to changing tennis rackets
for a patient with tennis elbow. And some patients do not respond
to the treatment at all.
Jeffrey
Gross, a Manhattan doctor specializing in physical medicine and
rehabilitation, served a number of patients who had been suffering
from the same injury for years with little improvement. He followed
the FDA approval process of the low-energy Sonocur machine closely,
and within a month of its okay in 2002, he had one in his office.
He
has since treated more than 900 patients with the device, including
pro basketball, hockey and tennis players, and college and high
school athletes.
"There are patients who will get better if you wave a wand
over them because of the placebo effect," he said. "I
am certain there is no placebo effect acting in these people. They
get better."
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