| Literature DB >> 22654954 |
Massimo Mammucari1, Antonio Gatti, Sergio Maggiori, Alessandro F Sabato.
Abstract
Mesotherapy is the injection of active substances into the surface layer of the skin. This method allows a slower spread, higher levels, and longer lasting effects of drugs in the tissues underlying the site of injection (skin, muscle, and joint) compared with those following intramuscular injection. This technique is useful when a local pharmacological effect is required and relatively high doses of drug in the systemic circulation are not. Mesotherapy should only be undertaken following a complete clinical workup and subsequent diagnosis. Encouraging results have been reported in randomized, controlled clinical trials and in observational studies involving patients with various forms of musculoskeletal pain. Recommendations by experts from the Italian Society of Mesotherapy for appropriate use of mesotherapy in musculoskeletal pain and an algorithm for treating localized painful conditions are provided.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22654954 PMCID: PMC3359685 DOI: 10.1155/2012/436959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Tissue levels of Na-ketoprofen (μg) detected by chromatography following local intradermal (LIT) or intramuscular (IM) administration, modified with permission from [23].
| Time (hours) | Skin | Muscle | Articular tissue | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LIT | IM | LIT | IM | LIT | IM | |
| 0 | nd | nd | nd | nd | nd | nd |
| 0.5 | 124.9 | 4.8 | 1.5 | 33.3 | 25.8 | 18.6 |
| 1 | 42.3 | t | 3 | t | 19.3 | 0.3 |
| 2 | 15.6 | t | 23.8 | t | 10.8 | t |
| 4 | 10.9 | t | 19.3 | t | 8.3 | t |
| 7 | t | nd | 100.6 | t | 6.2 | t |
| 10 | t | nd | 102.2 | t | 7 | t |
| 24 | nd | nd | 14.9 | nd | 0.8 | nd |
nd = not detectable; t = trace.
Initial open studies in patients with musculoskeletal pain.
| Study | Disease | No. of patients | Study characteristics | Drugs utilized | Control | Period of followup | No. of sessions | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ruggeri et al. 1981 [ | Cervico-dorsal rachialgia, lumbosacral spinalgia, coxarthrosis, gonarthrosis, and Duplay's disease | 984 | M R | NSAIDs, myorelaxants, and procaine | NC | from 3 to 6 weeks | 1–3 sessions at 1- or 2- week intervals | 80% of pts reported pain reduction. More effective in cervicodorsal rachialgia (87%), tendinitis and bursitis (83.3%); coxarthrosis (50%) |
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| Colombo et al. 1981 [ | Acute cervicalgia, lumbar pain, acute myositis, tendinitis, traumatic disorders, shoulder-hand syndrome | 484 | M P O | Vasodilators, NSAIDs, myorelaxants, and procaine | NC | 9 days | 3 sessions of mesotherapy at 3-day intervals | Pain reduction in 83.6% of pts. |
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| Saraceni et al. 1981 [ | Periarthritis, rachialgia, gonarthrosis, tendinitis, epitrocleitis, and carpal tunnel syndrome | 200 | M P O | NSAIDs, myorelaxant, vasodilator, and anaesthetic | NC | 3 sessions of treatment in 21 days | 3 sessions of treatment in 21 days | Pain reduction in 91% of pts. |
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| Piantoni et al. 1981 [ | Osteoarticular disorders with pain (cervical, dorsal, lumbar column, shoulder, hip, and knee) | 46 | P O | NSAIDs | NC | 21 days | sessions of treatment in 21 days | Pain reduction in 78% of pts. |
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| Pezone et al. 1981 [ | Osteoarticular disorders | 256 | M R | NSAIDs, myorelaxant, vasodilator, and anaesthetic | NC | 30 days | sessions every 3 days | Pain reduction in 52.7 % and improvement of articular function in 54.7% of pts. |
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Currò and Bearzato 1981 [ | Gonarthrosis | 20 | P O | s-adenosil l-methionine + lidocaine | NC | 7 weeks | 6 sessions | Pain reduction in 90% of pts. |
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| Guazzetti et al. 1988 [ | Musculoskeletal affections | 15 | P O | Naproxene, procaine | NC | ? | from 3 to 9 mesotherapy | Positive results in 90,5% of pts |
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Narvarte and Rosset-Llobet 2011 [ | Osteomuscular disorders | 67 | P O | Thiocolchicoside diazepam buflomedil piroxicam | NC | 4 weeks | from 1 to 18 sessions | Positive efficacy/safety |
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| Capone et al. 1994 [ | Calcific tendinitis of the shoulder | 50 | P O C | Disodium EDTA | Mesotherapy versus ionophoresis | 24 months | nr | Positive effects with both techniques (80% of patients) |
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| Piantoni et al. 1985 [ | Osteoporosis | 1 | CR | Calcitonine | NC | 30 days | 2 sessions per week | Pain reduction |
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Currò and Bearzatto 1985 [ | Postherpetic neuritis | 7 | P O | NSAIDs and procaine | NC | 7 weeks | weekly sessions | Pain reduction in 57% of pts after the first session |
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| Currò et al. 1983 [ | Degenerative arthrosis in a new acute stage of pain | 96 | P O | NSAIDs, s-adenosil l-methionine, and procaine | NC | 1 year | 6 sessions for 1, 2, or 3 cycle in a year | Reduction of pain, drugs consumption (67%), and absences from work (30%) |
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| Biondi et al. 1985 [ | Tendinitis, scapulohumeral periarthritis | 44 | P C | Superoxide dismutase (SOD) and mepivacaine | Mepivacaine | 5 months | 3–6 sessions every 4–8 days | Pain reduction in 90% of pts or recovery in the SOD+anesthetic group versus 33% in the group with the anesthetic alone |
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| Pezone et al. 1986 [ | Osteoporosis/arthritis | 32 | P O | Calcitonine | NC | 2–10 weeks | weekley sessions | Pain reduction (76.5% of pts) in particular in pts with osteoporosis and arthritis |
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| Solinas et al. 1987 [ | Tendinopathies | 20 | P O | Ergoteine | NC | nr | nr | Combination with laser therapy more effective (in term of pain reduction) than traditional therapies |
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| Garzya et al. 1987 [ | Muscular skeletal pain | 100 | P O C | NSAIDs and anesthetic | Naproxen, lysine acetylsalicylate, and ketoprofen | 52 days | 3 session at weekley intervals | Pain reduction; no differences between NSAIDs evaluated. |
The table lists clinical studies or case reports to evaluate the reduction of pain in various clinical conditions. The pain was noted with visual scales.
M: multicentric, R: retrospective, P: prospective, O: open, C: controlled, NC: noncontrolled, CS: case report, and nr: nonreported.
Clinical studies conducted in athletes both professional and amatory with posttraumatic pain.
| Study | Disease | No. of patients | Study characteristics | Drugs utilized | Control | Period of followup | No. of sessions | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cereser et al. 1985 [ | Pain posttraumatic in rugby professional players | 133 | R O | NSAIDs, myorelaxant, vasorelaxant, and mepivacaine | NC | up to 4 months | 1–4 sessions | Pain reduction and functional recovering of sporting competitive activity in shorter time then conventional therapies |
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| Gribaudo et al. 1982 [ | Pubic myoenthesitis | 256 | P O | NSAIDs and vasorelaxant | NC | 6 months | from 2 to 5 sessions at 10–20-day intervals | Complete functional recovery after 4 sessions |
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Lepore and Savino 1983 [ | Acute lumbosciatic pain in athletes | 20 | P O | Neuramidium, Procaine | NC | 4 months | 2–6 sessions | Pain reduction and functional recovery in 90% of pts |
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| Gribaudo et al. 1986 [ | Patellar tendonitis | 126 | P O | Superoxide dismutase (SOD), lidocaine, and vasorelaxant | NC | 1 month | weekley sessions | 85% of pts reach complete pain relief (form 1 to 4 sessions) |
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| Gribaudo et al. 1986 [ | Ileo-tibial band friction syndrome | 40 | P O | NSAIDS, vasorelaxant, and anesthetic | NC | 3 months | weekly sessions | Pain relief in 55% of pts after 2 sessions; 97.5% after 3 sessions |
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| Gribaudo et al. 1987 [ | Myonthesitis of the leg | 203 | P O | NSAIDs, vasorelaxant, and lidocaine | NC | 2 months | sessions at 7-8-day intervals | 60.8% of pts reach complete recovery with 1 session; 96.6% of pts reach complete recovery with 3 sessions. Mesotherapy was more efficacy in pts with recent pain. |
The table lists clinical studies to evaluate the reduction of pain in various clinical conditions. The pain was noted with visual scales.
R: retrospective, P: Prospective, O: open, and NC: noncontrolled.
Randomized, controlled clinical trial in patients with low back pain, cervicobrachialgia and calcific painful tendinitis of the shoulder.
| Study | Disease | No. of patients | Study characteristics | Drugs utilized | Control | Period of followup | No. of sessions | Outcome |
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| Parrini et al. 2002 [ | Acute lumbosciatic pain syndrome | 44 | RA | Acetylsalicylic acid | PC | 1 day | 1 | Pain reduction/safety |
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| Monticone et al. 2004 [ | Low back pain (sacroiliac dysfunction) | 22 | RA P C | NSAIDs | Laser therapy | 1 year | 2 session per week (8 sessions) | Pain reduction better for mesotherapy, exercise and dynamic support than laser therapy |
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| Costantino et al. 2010 [ | Low back pain | 84 | RA P C | Lidocaine, ketoprofen, and methylprednisolone | Standard therapy ketoprofen, esomeprazole and methylprednisolone | 6 months | 5 sessions | Same efficacy and safety systemic therapy |
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| Di Cesare et al. 2010 [ | Low back pain | 62 | RA P C | Lidocaine | Mesotherapy in acupuncture points versus mesotherapy in trigger points | 12 weeks | 4 sessions | Better reduction of pain with mesotherapy in acopunture points |
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| Cacchio et al. 2009 [ | Calcific tendinitis of the shoulder | 80 | RA DB | Disodium EDTA and procaine | PC | 1 year | 1 session at weekly intervals for 3 weeks | Calcification disappeared completely in 62.5% and partially in 22.5% of pts; partially effects were registered in 15% of pts in the control group |
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| Palermo et al. 1991 [ | Cervicobrachialgia | 20 | RA P O C | Lidocaine and myorelaxant | TENS | 20 days | 6 TENS 4 mesotherapy | Mesotherapy combined with TENS improves symptoms management, and reduces the number of needed TENS sessions |
The table lists clinical studies or case reports to evaluate the reduction of pain in various clinical conditions. The pain was noted with visual scales.
P: prospective, O: open, DB: double blind, RA: randomized, C: controlled, and PC: placebo controlled.
Figure 1Example of algorithm for the use of NSAIDs and myorelaxant with mesotherapy (intradermal therapy—ITD) in musculoskeletal pain.