Artigo Revisado por pares

New regimen for eccentric calf-muscle training in patients with chronic insertional Achilles tendinopathy: results of a pilot study

2008; BMJ; Volume: 42; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1136/bjsm.2007.039545

ISSN

1473-0480

Autores

Per Jönsson, Håkan Alfredson, Kerstin Sunding, Martin Fahlström, Jill Cook,

Tópico(s)

Exercise and Physiological Responses

Resumo

Chronic painful insertional Achilles tendinopathy is seen in both physically active and non-active individuals. Painful eccentric training, where the patients load the Achilles tendon into full dorsiflexion, has shown good results in patients with mid-portion Achilles tendinosis. However, only 32% of patients with insertional Achilles tendinopathy had good clinical results with that type of eccentric training regimen.To investigate whether a new model of painful eccentric training had an effect on chronic painful insertional Achilles tendinopathy.27 patients (12 men, 15 women, mean age 53 years) with a total of 34 painful Achilles tendons with a long duration of pain (mean 26 months), diagnosed as insertional Achilles tendinopathy, were included. The patients performed a new model of painful eccentric training regimen without loading into dorsiflexion. This was done as 3x15 reps, twice a day, 7 days/week, for 12 weeks. Pain during Achilles-tendon-loading activity (VAS) and patient's satisfaction (back to previous activity) were evaluated.At follow-up (mean 4 months) 18 patients (67%, 23/34 tendons) were satisfied and back to their previous tendon-loading activity. Their mean VAS had decreased from 69.9 (SD 18.9) to 21 (SD 20.6) (p<0.001). Nine patients (11 tendons) were not satisfied with the treatment, although their VAS was significantly reduced from 77.5 (8.6) to 58.1 (14.8) (p<0.01).In this short-term pilot study this new model of painful eccentric calf-muscle training showed promising clinical results in 67% of the patients.

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