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JBJS welcomes reader comments on published articles. Letters to the Editor are reviewed by JBJS editors but are not peer-reviewed. To submit your letter, please follow the "submit a response" link that appears in the content box at the upper right of the full text of the article.
Letters to the Editor to:
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- Scientific Articles:
Sanjitpal S. Gill, Martin K. Gelbke, Steve L. Mattson, Mark W. Anderson, and Shepard R. Hurwitz
- Fluoroscopically Guided Low-Volume Peritendinous Corticosteroid Injection for Achilles Tendinopathy. A Safety Study
J Bone Joint Surg Am 2004; 86: 802-806
[Abstract]
[Full text]
[PDF]
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Electronic letters published:
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Dr. Hurwitz responds:
- shepard r hurwitz, Sanjitpal Gill, Martin Gelbke, Steve Mattson, Mark Anderson and Shepard Hurwitz
(14 June 2004)
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Obliteration of peritendinous space in Achilles tendinopathy
- Narayan Hulse, Raja S, Sankar B
(27 May 2004)
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Dr. Hurwitz responds: |
14 June 2004 |
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shepard r hurwitz, orthopaedic surgeon University of Virginia, Sanjitpal Gill, Martin Gelbke, Steve Mattson, Mark Anderson and Shepard Hurwitz
Send letter to journal:
Re: Dr. Hurwitz responds:
srh5u{at}virginia.edu shepard r hurwitz, et al.
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To the Editor:
The concern raised by Dr. Hulse is that an injection of fluid
anterior to the Achilles tendon may in fact be instilled in the
anterior fat pad. And, he may be correct but the question remains unresolved. The citation (Maffulli, JBJS-B, 84:1-9) is a review article that
mentions adhesions of the peritenon to the tendon and there is no citation
that corroborates that statement.
There is extensive surgical experience
reporting changes in the peritenon and adhesion of the membrane to the
tendon, but the location of the adhesive condition is not uniformly
in the region anterior to the tendon. One large series (Astrom, CORR 316,
1995) stated that 40% of the time, the peritenon was thickened at surgery
and not all were adherent to the tendon. Dr. Maffulli is very experienced
in the treatment of Achilles tendon surgery and perhaps he has some
unpublished data he would like to share concerning the prevalence and
location of peritendinous adhesions.
If the injection technique described in our article does deliver
contrast, anesthetic and corticosteroid in the fat pad we cannot
conclusively say yes or no based on the two dimensional imaging that we
utilized (planar fluoroscopy).
This raises the intriguing possibility that the technique of passing
the needle from posterior to anterior through the Achilles tendon may have
an incidence of injection directly into the fat pad and not the
peritendinous space. The photo of an injection labeled figure 2 in the
article demonstrates a layering of the contrast along the anterior edge of
the tendon suggesting that at least some of the fluid is along the
anterior surface of the tendon. Whether this is true for some or all of
the procedures, we will have to visually examine each of the pictures
taken during the procedure. The premise of Achilles tendon safety with
corticosteroid injection remains intact because of the documentation that
the drug is not injected into the tendon.
What needs to be answered is the actual location of the fluid
injected anterior to the tendon and this, perhaps, may be discovered in a
future study to determine efficacy. We thank Dr. Hulse for bringing this
possibility to our attention. |
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Obliteration of peritendinous space in Achilles tendinopathy |
27 May 2004 |
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Narayan Hulse, Research fellow in orthopaedics Manchester Royal Infirmary (U.K), Raja S, Sankar B
Send letter to journal:
Re: Obliteration of peritendinous space in Achilles tendinopathy
nhulse{at}yahoo.com Narayan Hulse, et al.
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To The Editor:
In the article ‘‘Fluoroscopically guided low-volume
peritendinous corticosteroid injection for Achilles tendinopathy-a safety
study’’(1), the authors have concluded that it is safe to inject
corticosteroids under direct fluoroscopic visualization into the
peritendinous space for the treatment of Achilles tendinopathy. In figure-1 of the article, the authors have demonstrated a potential
peritendinous space between paratenon and Achilles tendon and have
tried to inject steroid in to this space using tenography.
However, from the
available literature, we know that the paratenon can be affected in the early
phase of tendinopathy and adhesions can be formed between the tendon and
paratenon[2]obliterating this potential space. Obviously in such cases,
the technique described by the authors, will deliver steroid in to pre-
Achilles fat rather than in to peritendinous space.
References
1.Gill SS, Gelbke MK, Mattson SL, Anderson MW, Hurwitz SR.
Fluoroscopically guided low-volume peritendinous corticosteroid injection
for Achilles tendinopathy. A safety study. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2004
Apr;86-A(4):802-6.
2.Maffulli N, Kader D. Tendinopathy of tendo achillis. J Bone Joint
Surg Br. 2002 Jan;84(1):1-8. |
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