In this study, the investigators aim to compare the effect of extracorporeal shockwave therapy with ultrasound-guided piriformis coticosteroid injection in treatment of PS.
Piriformis syndrome (PS) is one of the common etiology of low back pain. The cause of PS is due to myofascial syndrome of piriformis muscle, leading to piriformis muscle spasm, string-like taut band, and trigger point. Consequently, it may compresses the sciatic nerve which arise from sciatic notch and passes under the piriformis muscle. Conservative treatment of PS includes therapeutic exercise, diathermy, and local steroid injection. Among them, as radiology techniques advance, ultrasound-guided piriformis injection becomes popular for diagnosis block and treatment. Nowadays, extracorporeal shockwave therapy has widely applied in musculoskeletal disease such as plantar fasciitis, tennis elbow, and calcific tendinitis of the shoulder. However, to the investigators best knowledge, there is no study comparing the therapeutic effect between local steroid injection and shockwave. In this study, the investigators aim to compare the effect of extracorporeal shockwave therapy with ultrasound-guided piriformis corticosteroid injection. This is a randomized controlled trial. 70 participants will be randomly divided into shockwave group and injection group. The participant in the shockwave group will receive one time extracorporeal shockwave therapy, and injection group will receive one time ultrasound-guided piriformis muscle corticosteroid injection. After the intervention, participant in both groups will receive home-based stretch exercise. Evaluation will be performed at baseline, 1 week, and 5 weeks after intervention. Outcome measures include the pain visual analog scale (VAS), hip range of motion, change of pressure pain threshold, and Oswestry Disability Index (ODI).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
The therapy will be performed with the focused piezoelectric shockwave (F10G4 Richard Wolf GmbH, Germany). The patient will be kept in the hip flexion, adduction and internal rotation position. After sonography-guided localization of the affected muscle and identification of the trigger point by the participant, ultrasound gel is applied to the skin and the applicator couple is placed with an impulse energy flux density of 0.456-0.882 mJ/mm2 for 3500 impulses.
all the participants will receive ultrasound-guided piriformis injection with 10 mg triamcinolone and 1 c.c. 1% lidocaine for one time.
Shin Kong Wu Ho-Su Memorial Hospital
Taipei, Taiwan
The pain visual analog scale (VAS)
It measures severity of pain. It is performed with a 100-mm horizontal line. The end of the left side is defined as no pain, and the end of the right side as the worst pain. Participants are requested to report the severity of buttock pain in recent one week.
Time frame: change between baseline and at 1 week, 5 weeks after the beginning of the treatment.
Oswestry Disability Index (ODI)
ODI score is used for disability evaluation. It is a self-reported questionnaire with range 0-100. It has 10 questions with an minimal clinical important difference (MCID) of 10 points, with higher scores indicating more disability. The questions include pain intensity, sleep quality, and ability to perform personal care, work, sit, walk, lift, stand, and travel.
Time frame: change between baseline and at 1 week, 5 weeks after the beginning of the treatment.
hip range of motion
Internal and external rotation of the hip on the affected side will be measured with a goniometer by the study assistant. The measurement will be performed in the supine position according the standard procedure.
Time frame: change between baseline and at 1 week, 5 weeks after the beginning of the treatment.
change of pressure pain threshold
It is defined as the amount of pressure needed to shift local sensation from pressure to pain. This is measured with a digital algometer and has been shown to have excellent intrarater reliability in the gluteal region (ICC = .90), with a minimal detectable change of 3.1 N/cm2. The digital algometer, made up of a 1-cm-wide disk, will be placed at the tender point between the ischial tuberosity and the greater trochanter while the patient is lying prone. The algometer's pressure will be increased gradually (with a speed approximately 1 N/cm2 per second) until the participant reports pain. The average value of three repeated measurements is recorded.
Time frame: change between baseline and at 1 week, 5 weeks after the beginning of the treatment.
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