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Botulinum
Toxin Type A may do more than make you look
younger, may make your joints feel younger
too
Newswise — A single injection of intra-articular
botulinum toxin Type A may significantly
decrease pain and improve shoulder function
in osteoarthritis sufferers, according to
researches presented this week at the
American College of Rheumatology Annual
Scientific Meeting in Boston, Mass.
Osteoarthritis is the most common joint
disease affecting middle-age and older
people. It is characterized by progressive
damage to the joint cartilage—the slippery
material at the end of long bones—and causes
changes in the structures around the joint.
These changes can include fluid
accumulation, bony overgrowth, and loosening
and weakness of muscles and tendons, all of
which may limit movement and cause pain and
swelling.
Injection of botulinum neurotoxin (commonly
referred to by the brand name Botox) into
joints is a promising new approach for
treating sustained shoulder pain brought on
by arthritis. An injection of neurotoxin in
the joint may work by decreasing the release
of certain proteins from the nerves in the
joints—thereby decreasing the pain sensation
in the joint.
Researchers recently studied the
effectiveness of intra-articular botulinum
neurotoxin versus placebo in patients with
chronic shoulder pain, due to osteoarthritis
or rheumatoid arthritis, who did not respond
to corticosteroids or pain medication. These
patients also were not candidates for
shoulder arthroplasty.
Forty-three patients with moderate to severe
arthritis pain (categorized as greater than
4.5 on a scale of zero to 10 with zero as no
pain and 10 as the worst pain) were randomly
placed in two groups and assessed at one,
three and six months. The first group
received intra-articular neurotoxin and
lidocaine, while the second group received
saline and lidocaine.
By comparing pain levels before beginning
treatment to pain levels 28 days after the
treatment, researchers found that pain
levels were significantly lower in the
patients receiving neurotoxin compared to
placebo.
Thirty-eight percent of patients receiving
the injection of botulinum neurotoxin into
the joint had at least a 30 percent
reduction in pain score compared to only
nine percent of patients in the placebo
group. There was a trend toward a greater
improvement in shoulder function in the
botulinum toxin group, as compared to the
placebo group at 28 days.
“This study provides the initial ‘proof of
concept’ of effectiveness of botulinum toxin
injection for relief of shoulder joint
pain,” says investigator in the study,
Jasvinder Singh, MBBS, MPH; staff physician,
Minneapolis VA Medical Center; assistant
professor of medicine, University of
Minnesota; visiting scientist and K -12
scholar, Mayo Clinic School of Medicine. “A
more sophisticated, larger, multicenter,
randomized study is needed to assess
efficacy, safety, mode of action, optimal
dose and frequency of this novel treatment
option.”
The American College of Rheumatology is the
professional organization for
rheumatologists and health professionals who
share a dedication to healing, preventing
disability and curing arthritis and related
rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases.
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