| Literature DB >> 35327477 |
Po-Yen Chen1,2,3, Jai-Hong Cheng2,4,5, Zong-Sheng Wu1,2, Yao-Chi Chuang1,2.
Abstract
A shock wave (SW), which carries energy and propagates through a medium, is a type of continuous transmitted sonic wave that can achieve rapid energy transformations. SWs have been applied for many fields of medical science in various treatment settings. In urology, high-energy extracorporeal SWs have been used to disintegrate urolithiasis for 30 years. However, at lower energy levels, SWs enhance the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), chemoattractant factors, and the recruitment of progenitor cells, and inhibit inflammatory molecules. Low energy extracorporeal shock wave (LESW) therapy has been used in urology for treating chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CP/CPPS), interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS), overactive bladder, stress urinary incontinence, and erectile dysfunction through the mechanisms of anti-inflammation, neovascularization, and tissue regeneration. Additionally, LESW have been proven to temporarily increase tissue permeability and facilitate intravesical botulinum toxin delivery for treating overactive bladders in animal studies and in a human clinical trial. LESW assisted drug delivery was also suggested to have a synergistic effect in combination with cisplatin to improve the anti-cancer effect for treating urothelial cancer in an in vitro and in vivo study. LESW assisted drug delivery in uro-oncology is an interesting suggestion, but no comprehensive clinical trials have been conducted as of yet. Taken together, LESW is a promising method for the treatment of various diseases in urology. However, further investigation with a large scale of clinical studies is necessary to confirm the real role of LESW in clinical use. This article provides information on the basics of SW physics, mechanisms of action on biological systems, and new frontiers of SW medicine in urology.Entities:
Keywords: bladder; cryoinjury; erectile dysfunction; shock waves
Year: 2022 PMID: 35327477 PMCID: PMC8945448 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10030675
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Typical types of ultrasound, focused shock wave, and pressure wave. (A) Ultrasound waves are periodic oscillations with a limited bandwidth. (B) Focused shock wave is characterized by a single positive pressure wave (100 MPa), followed by a negative pressure wave (−10 MPa). The 1 microsecond (μs) of time interval is the positive pressure wave. (C) The pressure wave is 1 MPa positive wave and less than 1 MPa negative wave in 5 milliseconds (ms).
Figure 2The biological effects associated with related energy levels of ESWT.
Figure 3Biological effects and related molecules after ESWT.
LESW for chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome.
| Study Design | N | Treatment Setting Treatment Course (mJouls/mm2) | Following Duration (Weeks) | Treatment Effect | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zimmermann et al., 2008 [ | Cohort | 34 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks. 0.25, 3 Hz. | 1, 4, 12 | Improvements in pain and QoL. |
| Zimmermann et al., 2009 [ | Double-blind. RCT | 60 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks. 0.25, 3 Hz. | 1,4,12 | Improved QoL, IIEF, CPSI, VAS, and IPSS at 1, 4, and 12 weeks. |
| Zeng et al., | RCT | 80 | 3000 impulses, 5 times a week, 2 weeks. | 4, 12 | Decreased NIH-CPSI score, improved QOL, 71.1% vs. 28.9% at week 2. |
| Vahdatpour | RCT | 40 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks. | 1,2,3, 12 | Pain scores decreases at 2, 3, and 12 weeks. |
| Moayednia | RCT | 19 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks. | 16, 20, 24 | NIH-CPSI, VAS, IPSS decreased. |
| Pajovic et al., | RCT | 30 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks. | 12, 24, 36 | Improved NIH-CPSI. |
| Al Edwan et al., | Cohort | 41 | 2500 impulses per week, 4 weeks. | 2, 24, 48 | Improved NIH-CPSI, IIEF, IPSS. |
| Guu et al., | Cohort | 33 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks. | 1, 4, 12 | Improved NIH-CPSI, IIEF, IPSS. |
| Salama et al., 2018 [ | RCT | 40 | 3000 pulses, 12 Hz at 3 to 5 bar, twice a week for 4 weeks. | 1, 4, 8 | Four domains of the NIH-CPSI decreased at weeks 1, 4, and 8. |
| Zhang et al., | nRCT | 40 | 3000 pulses per week, 8 weeks. | 4, 8, 12 | Both groups improved NIH-CPSI, QoL, VAS, IPSS, and IIEF-5. Only 8 weeks CPSI. IIEF statistically significant. |
| Skaudickas et al., 2020 [ | Cohort | 40 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks. | 0, 4, 12 | NIH-CPSI, IPSS, VAS, and IIEF-5 showed greatest improvement at week 4; VAS and IPSS, improvement at week 12. |
| Li et al., 2020 [ | Cohort | 32 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks. | 1, 2, 4, 12 | VAS and the NIH-CPSI showed substantial improvement at week 4 and 12. |
| Kim et al., 2021 [ | Double-blind | 34 | 3000 impulses per week, 8 weeks. | 0, 4 | NIH-CPSI, QoL, IIEF, and VAS decrease at Week 0 and 4. |
| Mykoniatis et al., 2021 [ | Double-blind | 45 | 5000 shockwaves per week, 6 weeks, 0.1. | 4, 12, 24 | NIH-CPSI, pain, and QoL improved, persisted at 24 weeks. |
| Sakr et al., | RCT | 155 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks. | 4, 12, 24, 48 | NIH-CPSI, IPSS, VAS, and IIEF-5. |
| Wu et al., | Cohort | 215 | 3000 impulses per week, 6 weeks. | 4, 12, 24, 48 | Improved NIH-CPSI, IIEF, IPSS, and AUA QoL_US at 4, 12, 24, and 48 weeks |
CPSI = Chronic Prostatitis Symptom Index; IIEF = International Index of Erectile Function; IPSS = International Prostate Symptom Score; VAS = Visual Analog Scale; AUA QoL_US = American Urological Association Quality of Life due to Urinary Symptom.
LESW for erectile dysfunction.
| Study Design | N | Treatment Setting Treatment Course (mJouls/mm2) | Following Duration (Months) | Treatment Effect | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skolarikos et al., | Cohort | 40 | 3000 impulses, 6 weeks. | 3, 12 | 64.2% improve IIEF |
| Poulakis et al., | RCT | 68 | 2000 impulses per week, 5 weeks, 0.25. | 1, 3, 6 | Improvement in pain, IIEF-5 score and plaque size, but no difference compared to another group. |
| Zimmermann et al., 2009 [ | RCT | 60 | 3000 impulses per week, 4 weeks, | 1, 3 | Improvement of pain, QoL, and voiding conditions IIEF-5. |
| Chitale et al., | RCT | 36 | 3000 impulses per week, 6 weeks. | 3, 6 | Improved IIEF-5 and VAS score. No significant change in Peyronie’s disease. |
| Gruenwald et al., 2012 [ | Cohort | 29 | 1500 impulses twice per week, 3 weeks, 0.09. | 1, 2 | DE-5i poor responders. |
| Vardi et al., | RCT | 67 | 1500 impulses twice per week, 9 weeks, 0.09. | 1 | Improved IIEF-5, EHS, and penile blood flow. |
| Palmieri et al., | Cohort | 50 | 2000 impulses per week, 4 weeks, 0.25. | 3, 6 | Improved IIEF-5 and quality of life. |
| Yee et al., | RCT | 70 | 1500 impulses twice per week, 9 weeks, 0.09. | 1 | Clinical improvement in IIEF-ED and EHS, but no significant difference between two groups. |
| Srini et al., | RCT | 135 | NA | 1, 3, 6, 9, 12 | Improvement in IIEF-EF, EHS, and CGIC. |
| Pelayo-Nieto et al., | Cohort | 15 | 5000 impulses per week, 4 weeks, 0.09. | 1, 6 | Improvement in IIEF, SEP, and GAQ. |
| Chung and Cartmill | Cohort | 30 | 3000 impulses twice per week, 6 weeks, 0.25. | 1, 4 | PDE5i non-responders; |
| Bechara et al., | Cohort | 25 | 5000 impulses once per week, 4 weeks, 0.09. | 3 | PDE-5i non-responders. |
| Frey et al., | Cohort | 18 | 3000 impulses twice per week, 6 weeks. 20, 15, and 12. | 1, 12 | post-prostatectomy erectile dysfunction. |
| Olsen et al., | RCT | 112 | 3000 impulses per week, 5 weeks, 0.15. | 1, 3, 6 | Improved IIEF-5 and EHS. |
| Hisasue | Cohort | 57 | 1500 impulses twice per week, 9 weeks, 0.09. | 1, 3, 6 | Improvement in IIEF, EHS, and MPCC. |
| Kalyvianakis et al., 2018 [ | RCT | 44 | 5000 impulses once/twice per week, 6 weeks, 2 phase treatment, 0.05. | 1,3, 6 | Vasculogenic ED, PDE5 responders. |
| Vinay et al., | RCT | 76 | 5000 impulses once per week, 4 weeks, 0.09. | 1, 3, 6 | *PDE5I refractory patients. |
| Oliveira et al., | Cohort | 25 | 2000 impulses on perineum + 2000 on dorsum penis once per week, 6 weeks, 0.16. | 1.5, 3 | Improved PSV and EDV. |
| Huang et al., | Cohort | 35 | NA | 1, | Improved IIEF-5, EHS, erectile rigidity, and nocturnal erection frequency. |
| Sramkova et al., | RCT | 60 | 6000 impulses twice per week, 2 weeks, 0.160. | 1, 3 | Improve IIEF-5, EHS, GAQ, SEP 2, and SEP 3. |
| Palmieri et al., | RCT | 106 | 3000 impulses twice per week, 3 weeks, 0.25. | 1 | vasculogenic ED PDE5i non-responders. |
| Shendy et al., | RCT | 42 | 3 | Improved IIEF-5 and PSV. |
GAQ = Global Assessment Questionnaire EHS = Erectile Hardness Score, CGIC = Clinical Global Impression of Change, MPCC = maximal penile circumferential change, NA = not available, SEP3 = Sexual Encounter Profile question 3 score, MCIDs = minimally clinical important differences.