Efficacy of extracorporeal shock waves in the treatment of myofascial pain syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis of controlled clinical studies
Original Article

Efficacy of extracorporeal shock waves in the treatment of myofascial pain syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis of controlled clinical studies

Tao Wu1,2, Sha Li1,2, Jing Ren3, Dun Wang1,2, Yanran Ai1,2

1Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China; 2Key Laboratory of Rehabilitation Medicine, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China; 3International Medical Center, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China

Contributions: (I) Conception and design: S Li; (II) Administrative support: T Wu; (III) Provision of study materials or patients: J Ren; (IV) Collection and assembly of data: D Wang; (V) Data analysis and interpretation: Y Ai, T Wu; (VI) Manuscript writing: All authors; (VII) Final approval of manuscript: All authors.

Correspondence to: Tao Wu. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China; Key Laboratory of Rehabilitation Medicine, West China Hospital, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China. Email: wtdjf060809@163.com.

Background: Myofascial pain syndrome (MPS) is recurrent local myofascial pain with various treatment methods. In recent years, extracorporeal shock wave therapy (ESWT) has attracted much attention, but its role still lacks systematic review. We included controlled clinical studies for meta-analysis to systematically evaluate the application effect of ESWT.

Methods: The English literature from PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Web of Science to October 2021 was searched by computer. After screening, the quality was evaluated by the PEDro (Physiotherapy Evidence Database) scale and analyzed by RevMan 5.4 software.

Results: A total of 571 patients were included in 8 studies. The MPS pain sites of 541 patients were in the neck and upper back, and only 30 patients had pain sites in the waist. Meta-analysis showed that the pain level after ESWT was lower than that after other treatment methods [mean difference (MD) =−1.34, 95% confidential interval (CI): −1.87 to −0.81, P<0.00001], the pain threshold after ESWT was higher than that after other treatment methods (MD =0.90, 95% CI: 0.73 to 1.07, P<0.00001), and the neck disability index after ESWT was lower (MD =−1.79, 95% CI: −2.48 to −1.10, P<0.00001).

Discussion: ESWT can avoid the adverse effects of invasive procedures on patient tolerance and compliance; compared with trigger point injection (TPI), dry needling, ultrasound-guided pulsed radiofrequency (US), and other methods, ESWT can more effectively relieve pain in patients with MPS.

Keywords: Extracorporeal shock waves; myofascial pain syndrome (MPS); meta-analysis


Submitted Dec 21, 2021. Accepted for publication Feb 14, 2022.

doi: 10.21037/atm-22-295


Introduction

Myofascial pain syndrome (MPS), a musculoskeletal system disease, is a recurrent local myofascial pain characterized by the appearance of myofascial trigger points (MTrPs) (1). MTrPs are palpable nodules in the fibrous bands of skeletal muscle and are characterized by painful irritability, and direct or indirect stimulation of MTrPs causes intense referred pain, neuroelectrical activity, and convulsive responses, which can even lead to joint limitation and loss of mobility (2). Although myofascial pain can involve a wide range of pain points up and down the body; neck, shoulder, and back pain is the most common in clinical practice, and the degree of pain is the most significant (3). A study (4) has shown that sedentary, excessive mental stress and long-term poor posture can all cause muscle strain, resulting in the formation of neck, shoulder, and back myofascial lesions, directly affecting the nerve endings and producing pain. The treatment modalities for MPS include trigger point injection (TPI), transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), ultrasound (US), and other modalities. In recent years, extracorporeal shock wave therapy (ESWT) as a type of physical therapy has been applied in the treatment of MPS. Shock waves are high-energy mechanical waves. ESWT uses the principle of shock wave to transmit energy to the deep tissue of musculoskeletal tissue, so as to carry out pathological reversal of human muscle, bone, internal organs and other tissue lesions, and achieve the purpose of treatment. In the practice of rehabilitation medicine, ESWT is mainly used in ischemic femoral head necrosis, delayed fracture healing and various chronic pain (5). At present, many controlled clinical studies have shown the effectiveness of ESWT therapy for the treatment of MPS, but there are very few systematic reviews on this aspect. The study by Yoo et al. (6) included five controlled clinical studies for meta-analysis. However, this study was limited to patients with pain sites in the trapezius muscle, and the number of included studies was too small. The study by Jun et al. (7) included 11 articles but included observational studies, so the level of evidence of the results was not high. This study included more high-quality controlled clinical studies and analyzed whether ESWT is more effective than other treatment modalities.

We present the following article in accordance with the PRISMA reporting checklist (available at https://atm.amegroups.com/article/view/10.21037/atm-22-295/rc).


Methods

Literature search strategy

The following databases were searched by computer: PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Web of Science for clinical studies from database establishment to October 2021, and we limited the English literature. The keyword phrases used in the search were “ESWT”, “extracorporeal shock wave”, “MPS”, and “myofascial pain syndrome”.

Inclusion of studies

We developed inclusion criteria according to the PICOS (Patients, Intervention, Control, Outcome, Study type) principle, which aims to solve this problem: “Is the treatment of ESWT more advantageous than other intervention methods?”: (I) study subjects: all study subjects were patients with MPS, we do not limit gender, we do not limit the site of pain onset, neck, shoulder, lower back, and femoral pain patients were included in the study; (II) intervention group method: the study included a group treated with ESWT, and the ESWT adopted in each study may be different, in respect of energy density and total treatment time. Simple limb movements can be used during ESWT treatment, but the movement is only to be used with ESWT, not a stand-alone treatment; we exclude combined treatment; (III) control group method: a control group must be included in the study, and its intervention method is Sham ESWT, or one or more of nerve electrical stimulation therapy, drug injection therapy, ultrasonic therapy; (IV) efficacy determination: we take the degree of pain after treatment, pain threshold when pressed, disability index as the main efficacy indicators. To avoid severe heterogeneity, the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) method was used to determine the degree of pain after treatment, excluding the degree of pain assessed by other methods, such as Rating Scales and Verbal Scales (8). We selected the data after the end of treatment or 1 week after the end of treatment as the analysis, and the data during treatment will not be included in the analysis. (V) Study types: we only included controlled trials, and we preferred to include randomized controlled trials but also included controlled clinical trials or quasi-randomized studies. We did not include controlled studies at different periods, and we did not limit the randomization method, allocation concealment, or blinding method adopted by the study, but we would assess the quality of the study before analysis.

Literature selection and data extraction

All the retrieved literature in the database was stored in files with the suffix name “enw” or “txt” and managed uniformly by the import function of Endnote X9 software. After the repeated studies were automatically removed by the software, we read the titles and abstracts of the articles for screening. After the unqualified literature was removed, the remaining literature was obtained in full text and screened continuously until qualified literature was obtained. This work was independently completed by two researchers. To solve differences between the two reviewers, a third reviewer was introduced to participate in the discussion.

Data extraction was independently performed by the two researchers using Excel sheets, which were cross-checked after completion. The extracted contents included: (I) basic data of the literature: name of the first author, publication time and publication; (II) characteristics of the study subjects: sample size, gender ratio, average age, location of pain, diagnosis of the disease, and duration (course of the disease); (III) literature intervention methods: specific measures for the intervention group and the control group; (IV) outcome data: drop-out cases, outcome data. In the process of data extraction, if no specific data were provided in the literature, the data were obtained according to the address specified in the literature. If the data could not be obtained, the original author of the literature was contacted to obtain the data; if the data could not be obtained, the literature was excluded.

Literature quality

We used the PEDro scale (9) to evaluate the included randomized control trial (RCT) studies, which contained 11 evaluation criteria, with 1 point for each item and a total score of 11 points.

Risk of bias, heterogeneity survey, and sensitivity analysis

The risk of bias assessment tool provided in RevMan 5.4 was used for analysis. The risk assessment was performed for each study from six aspects: randomization, allocation concealment, quality of blinding, outcome assessment, incomplete data, selective reporting, and other bias. The source of heterogeneity was judged by subgroup analysis and exclusion, and if the source could not be identified, general descriptive analysis was used. Sensitivity analysis was performed by comparing the results of the fixed-effect model with those of the random-effect model.

Statistical methods

Heterogeneity analysis: the heterogeneity among different studies was analyzed using the I2 test and Q test. The heterogeneity was not statistically significant, as indicated by I2<50% or P≥0.1, which means there was no (or acceptable) heterogeneity among the studies. Effect size: MD (mean difference) effect size was used for continuous variables. The 95% CI was used as the confidence interval, and P<0.05 was considered statistically significant. Effect model selection: if heterogeneity analysis showed no heterogeneity between literatures, a fixed effect model was used; if heterogeneity existed, a random effect model was used; analysis tools and result presentation: Revman 5.4 software provided by Cochrane was used as analysis tool in this study, and the analysis results were presented in the form of forest plot; publication bias analysis: publication bias was reported in funnel plot.


Results

Literature screening results

In this study, 463 literatures were initially identified, 76 repeated literatures were automatically removed using Endnote X9 tool, 259 literatures that did not meet the criteria were screened and excluded, 43 literatures that could not obtain the full text were excluded, 75 literatures that did not meet the requirements were excluded after reading the full text, and 10 literatures (10-19) were finally included. The selection flow chart is shown in Figure 1. Study (20) used a combination modality and was excluded; study (21) included cases with non-MPS and was excluded (others had much excluded literature data and we do not list all of them here).

Figure 1 The selection flow chart. RCT, randomized control trial; MPS, myofascial pain syndrome; WOS, Web of Science.

Basic characteristics of literatures

A total of 571 patients were included in this study, of which 541 patients had MPS pain at the neck and upper back, and only 30 patients had pain at the waist, as shown in Table 1.

Table 1

Basic characteristics/patient information/outcome indicators/quality scores of the included studies

Author Year of publication Pain site Mean age (years) Population (E/C) Experimental group Control group Follow-up time Outcome indicators PEDro Score
Jeon et al. (10) 2012 Neck and upper back 45.00±15.46 15/15 ESWT TPI + TENS 4 weeks PPT/VAS/PRS/MPQ 8
Hong et al. (11) 2017 Lumborum 55.46±15.09 15/15 ESWT TPI 4 weeks PPT/ODI/RM/QBS 7
Aktürk et al. (12) 2018 Neck and upper back 33.45±8.02 20/20 ESWT US 6 weeks PPT/VAS/SF-36 9
Luan et al. (13) 2019 Neck and upper back 32.47±10.58 30/32 ESWT DN 4 weeks PPT/VAS/NDI 10
Gezgİnaslan et al. (14) 2019 Neck and upper back 44.2±11.94 49/45 H-ESWT TENS + US 4 weeks VAS/SF-36/PSQI/NDI/BDI 10
Kamel et al. (15) 2020 Neck and upper back 48.8±7.5 22/21 ESWT US 4 weeks VAS/ROM 10
Toghtamesh et al. (16) 2020 Neck and upper back 28.13±3.98 16/16 ESWT DN 4 weeks VAS/ROM 10
Rahbar et al. (17) 2021 Neck and upper back 38.09±9.67 22/23 ESWT US + HP 4 weeks VAS/PPT/NDI 9
Taheri et al. (18) 2021 Neck and upper back 46.6±12.6 19/18 ESWT US 4 weeks VAS/NDI 8
Yalçın (19) 2021 Neck and upper back 40.4±12.8 75/82 ESWT KT 4 weeks VAS/PPT/NDI 7

E, experimental; C, control; PPT, pressure pain threshold; VAS, Visual Analog Scale; MPQ, McGrill pain questionnaire; PRS, Pain Rating Scale; ESWT, extracorporeal shock wave therapy; TPI, trigger point injection; TENS, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation; ODI, Oswestry Disability Index; RM, Roles and Maudsley; QBS, Quebec Back Pain Disability Scale scores; SF-36, Short Form-36 for quality of life; US, ultrasound; HP, hot pack; DN, dry needling; NDI, Neck Disability Index; H-ESWT, high-energy flux density ESWT; PSQI, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; ROM, range of motion; KT, kinesiological taping.

Risk assessment of bias of included literatures

RevMan 5.4 was used for the risk assessment of the included literature. The literature (12,18) described the allocation concealment and blindness method. The literature (11,19) did not use the random allocation method nor used the allocation concealment and blindness method. There were great implementation risks. The literature (10) did not describe the random allocation method, allocation concealment, or blindness method. All literatures described the dropout cases. There was no selective reporting bias risk or other risks, as shown in Figures 2,3.

Figure 2 Summary chart of risk of bias assessment of included literatures (10-19).
Figure 3 Risk of bias assessment chart of the included literature.

Meta-analysis results

Pain after treatment (VAS)

All studies (10,12-19) reported the comparison of pain after treatment between the experimental group and the control group using ESWT. There was statistical heterogeneity between the studies (I2=85%, P<0.00001). Therefore, using random effects mode analysis, the pain level after treatment was lower with the ESWT method than with other treatment methods (MD =−1.34, 95% CI: −1.87 to −0.81, P<0.00001), as shown in Figure 4.

Figure 4 Comparison of pain intensity after ESWT treatment and other modalities for MPS (10,12-19). ESWT, extracorporeal shock wave therapy; MPS, myofascial pain syndrome; SD, standard deviation; CI, confidential interval; IV, inverse variance.

Post-treatment press pain threshold (PPT)

Six articles (10-13,17,19) reported the PPT after treatment, and the number of patients in the experimental and control groups was 177 and 187, respectively. There was statistical heterogeneity between the studies (I2=98%, P<0.00001), so the random-effects model combined analysis was used. The pain threshold after ESWT was higher than that after other treatment methods (MD =0.90, 95% CI: 0.73 to 1.07, P<0.00001), as shown in Figure 5.

Figure 5 Comparison of pain thresholds after ESWT and other modalities for MPS (10-13,17,19). ESWT, extracorporeal shock wave therapy; MPS, myofascial pain syndrome; SD, standard deviation; CI, confidential interval; IV, inverse variance.

Post-treatment Neck Disability Index (NDI)

Three studies (13,17,19) reported the neck disability index after treatment. Because there was statistical heterogeneity between the studies (I2=92%, P<0.00001), a random effects mode combined analysis was used. The neck disability index was lower after ESWT (MD =−1.79, 95% CI: −2.48 to −1.10, P<0.00001), as shown in Figure 6.

Figure 6 Neck Disability Index after ESWT treatment and other modalities for MPS (13,17,19). ESWT, extracorporeal shock wave therapy; MPS, myofascial pain syndrome; SD, standard deviation; CI, confidential interval; IV, inverse variance.

Heterogeneity investigation and sensitivity analysis

In the analysis of 3 main outcome indicators, there was statistically significant heterogeneity among the studies. The source of heterogeneity may be from the different sites of MPS pain. We grouped patients according to the site of pain (neck and upper back and lumborum). The results showed that there was still significant heterogeneity within the two subgroups. We excluded each other one by one and could not determine the source of heterogeneity. Therefore, the source of heterogeneity in our analysis may be a mixture of multiple factors, such as patient age, pain site, treatment time and follow-up time, and different treatment methods in the experimental group and control group.

In the analysis of posttreatment pain, if the effect mode was changed to the fixed effect mode, the effect size was obtained (MD =−1.20, 95% CI: −1.39 to −1.01, P<0.00001), which was not significantly different from the results of the random effect mode, indicating that the results of the meta-analysis were stable.

Analysis of publication bias

In the analysis of pain after treatment, the funnel plot showed that both sides were evenly distributed, suggesting that there was a small possibility of publication bias, as shown in Figure 7.

Figure 7 Funnel plot for the analysis of pain after ESWT and other modalities for MPS. ESWT, extracorporeal shock wave therapy; MPS, myofascial pain syndrome; MD, mean difference; SE, standard error.

Discussion

ESWT therapy was initially applied in the lithotripsy of renal calculi and later in the treatment of long-term nonunion of fractures, gradually moving toward the field of treatment of chronic pain. ESWT is a noninvasive physical therapy method that is simple to perform, noninvasive, and has no adverse effects (22). In this study, 10 controlled clinical studies were included. Meta-analysis was performed to determine the therapeutic effect of ESWT on MPS. The results showed that compared with other treatment methods, ESWT can reduce pain, increase the pain threshold, and reduce the shoulder and neck disability index, providing an evidence-based basis for the application of ESWT in the treatment of MPS.

In the control groups in the literature (10,11), the TPI treatment method was adopted, and the principle was to inject analgesic drugs (glucocorticoids and local anesthetics) into the trigger points to eliminate inflammation, block pain, and reduce edema. However, this treatment method lacks long-term effects, and the direct injection of drugs may bring allergic reactions and other adverse reactions (23). Extracorporeal shock waves do not require invasive procedures and directly conduct energy through the skin into muscle tissue to improve microcirculation and promote the separation of adherent soft tissues, which can have a long-acting analgesic effect (14).

In the literature (13,16), the control group adopted the dry needling method, and the effect size result of pain VAS showed that the pain relief rate of ESWT was superior to that of acupuncture. It is noteworthy that in the literature (13), the improvement rate for PPT was better with dry needling therapy than with ESWT therapy. Acupuncture therapy from different angles to continuously stimulate and destroy the trigger pain points to achieve the purpose of treatment, this approach has a good effect, but the patient’s tolerance and compliance are poor, and it still belongs to the category of invasive procedures.

Ultrasound-guided pulsed radiofrequency is a noninvasive procedure similar to ESWT that can emit high-frequency pulse current, promote local separation of adherent tissue, and effectively avoid nerve injury. However, this method has a poor energy transfer effect and a low pain relief rate. The control group in previous studies (12,14,15,18) was treated with ultrasound-guided pulsed radiofrequency, but the rate of pain relief was worse than that of ESWT.

It should be noted that in the study by Király et al. (20), the innovative combination of ESWT and laser was applied in the treatment of MPS, and the results showed that the effect was better than ESWT alone, which suggested that in the clinical treatment, the physician could reasonably combine ESWT with different treatment methods. This could not only improve the therapeutic effect and shorten the treatment course but also increase the patient’s tolerance and reduce adverse reactions.

In the study by Park et al. (24), high-energy density (0.210 mJ/mm) was compared with the low-energy density (0.068 mJ/mm) ESWT method, and the results showed that high-energy density ESWT was superior to low-energy density treatment in improving symptoms and relieving pain, but its safety and efficacy still require more research support.

This study found that there was great heterogeneity among the 10 studies, and the heterogeneity was derived from the confounding of multiple factors. The funnel plot of this study showed that both sides were evenly distributed, without significant publication bias. The sensitivity analysis showed that the results were stable. However, in this study, some studies did not use the random allocation method, which may cause implementation bias. More controlled clinical studies with the same assessment method with the same case characteristics should be explored in depth in the future.


Conclusions

In conclusion, ESWT can avoid the adverse effects of invasive procedures on patient tolerance and compliance; compared with TPI, dry needling and US, ESWT can more effectively relieve the pain of MPS patients.


Acknowledgments

Funding: None.


Footnote

Reporting Checklist: The authors have completed the PRISMA reporting checklist. Available at https://atm.amegroups.com/article/view/10.21037/atm-22-295/rc

Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at https://atm.amegroups.com/article/view/10.21037/atm-22-295/coif). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.

Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0), which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited (including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license). See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.


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Cite this article as: Wu T, Li S, Ren J, Wang D, Ai Y. Efficacy of extracorporeal shock waves in the treatment of myofascial pain syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis of controlled clinical studies. Ann Transl Med 2022;10(4):165. doi: 10.21037/atm-22-295

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