Utility of the heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch in the treatment of pain associated with shoulder impingement syndrome: a pilot study

Richard Radnovich,1 Thomas B Marriott21Injury Care Medical Center, Boise, ID, USA; 2Pain Group, Nuvo Research US, Salt Lake City, UT, USAIntroduction: Pain control is an important first step in the treatment of shoulder impingement syndrome (SIS) because fear of pain must be removed as an obstacle t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Radnovich R, Marriott TB
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2013-07-01
Series:International Journal of General Medicine
Online Access:http://www.dovepress.com/utility-of-the-heated-lidocainetetracaine-patch-in-the-treatment-of-pa-a13849
id doaj-5578a6df8bab47438755eb509e9e2bd6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5578a6df8bab47438755eb509e9e2bd62020-11-25T00:04:54ZengDove Medical PressInternational Journal of General Medicine1178-70742013-07-012013default641646Utility of the heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch in the treatment of pain associated with shoulder impingement syndrome: a pilot studyRadnovich RMarriott TBRichard Radnovich,1 Thomas B Marriott21Injury Care Medical Center, Boise, ID, USA; 2Pain Group, Nuvo Research US, Salt Lake City, UT, USAIntroduction: Pain control is an important first step in the treatment of shoulder impingement syndrome (SIS) because fear of pain must be removed as an obstacle to participation in an appropriate physical therapy program.Methods: Adult patients with SIS-associated pain of at least 2 weeks’ duration and who had an average pain score of ≥4 on the zero- to ten-point Numeric Pain Rating Scale were eligible to enroll in this 2-week pilot study. Patients were treated with the heated lidocaine/tetracaine (70 mg/70 mg) patch (HLT patch) placed over the site of shoulder tenderness each morning and evening for a period of 2 to 4 hours. Average and worst pain during the previous 24 hours and shoulder range of motion were assessed at baseline and on Day 14. Results were expressed as change and percent change from baseline to Day 14. This pilot study was not powered for rigorous statistical analysis.Results: Twenty patients (seven male, 13 female; average age 51.2 ± 10.8 years [mean ± standard deviation]) enrolled in this study, and 18 patients completed the protocol. The mean average pain score at baseline was 5.5 ± 1.1 (range 4 to 8). In the per-protocol population, average and worst pain scores declined by 2.4 ± 2.0 and 3.7 ± 2.7 points, respectively. Two-thirds of the patients demonstrated a clinically meaningful ≥30% decline in average pain score, and half of the patients demonstrated a ≥50% decline in average pain score. Shoulder internal rotation increased by 29.7° ± 21.8° and abduction increased by 40.0° ± 44.2°. Application-site erythema was reported by ten patients at some time during the study.Conclusion: Patients treated with the HLT patch for 14 days demonstrated clinically meaningful improvement in pain intensity and range of motion. Further controlled research is necessary to characterize the efficacy and tolerability of the HLT patch in the treatment of SIS.Keywords: SIS, HLT patch, range of motion, pain intensityhttp://www.dovepress.com/utility-of-the-heated-lidocainetetracaine-patch-in-the-treatment-of-pa-a13849
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Radnovich R
Marriott TB
spellingShingle Radnovich R
Marriott TB
Utility of the heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch in the treatment of pain associated with shoulder impingement syndrome: a pilot study
International Journal of General Medicine
author_facet Radnovich R
Marriott TB
author_sort Radnovich R
title Utility of the heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch in the treatment of pain associated with shoulder impingement syndrome: a pilot study
title_short Utility of the heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch in the treatment of pain associated with shoulder impingement syndrome: a pilot study
title_full Utility of the heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch in the treatment of pain associated with shoulder impingement syndrome: a pilot study
title_fullStr Utility of the heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch in the treatment of pain associated with shoulder impingement syndrome: a pilot study
title_full_unstemmed Utility of the heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch in the treatment of pain associated with shoulder impingement syndrome: a pilot study
title_sort utility of the heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch in the treatment of pain associated with shoulder impingement syndrome: a pilot study
publisher Dove Medical Press
series International Journal of General Medicine
issn 1178-7074
publishDate 2013-07-01
description Richard Radnovich,1 Thomas B Marriott21Injury Care Medical Center, Boise, ID, USA; 2Pain Group, Nuvo Research US, Salt Lake City, UT, USAIntroduction: Pain control is an important first step in the treatment of shoulder impingement syndrome (SIS) because fear of pain must be removed as an obstacle to participation in an appropriate physical therapy program.Methods: Adult patients with SIS-associated pain of at least 2 weeks’ duration and who had an average pain score of ≥4 on the zero- to ten-point Numeric Pain Rating Scale were eligible to enroll in this 2-week pilot study. Patients were treated with the heated lidocaine/tetracaine (70 mg/70 mg) patch (HLT patch) placed over the site of shoulder tenderness each morning and evening for a period of 2 to 4 hours. Average and worst pain during the previous 24 hours and shoulder range of motion were assessed at baseline and on Day 14. Results were expressed as change and percent change from baseline to Day 14. This pilot study was not powered for rigorous statistical analysis.Results: Twenty patients (seven male, 13 female; average age 51.2 ± 10.8 years [mean ± standard deviation]) enrolled in this study, and 18 patients completed the protocol. The mean average pain score at baseline was 5.5 ± 1.1 (range 4 to 8). In the per-protocol population, average and worst pain scores declined by 2.4 ± 2.0 and 3.7 ± 2.7 points, respectively. Two-thirds of the patients demonstrated a clinically meaningful ≥30% decline in average pain score, and half of the patients demonstrated a ≥50% decline in average pain score. Shoulder internal rotation increased by 29.7° ± 21.8° and abduction increased by 40.0° ± 44.2°. Application-site erythema was reported by ten patients at some time during the study.Conclusion: Patients treated with the HLT patch for 14 days demonstrated clinically meaningful improvement in pain intensity and range of motion. Further controlled research is necessary to characterize the efficacy and tolerability of the HLT patch in the treatment of SIS.Keywords: SIS, HLT patch, range of motion, pain intensity
url http://www.dovepress.com/utility-of-the-heated-lidocainetetracaine-patch-in-the-treatment-of-pa-a13849
work_keys_str_mv AT radnovichr utilityoftheheatedlidocainetetracainepatchinthetreatmentofpainassociatedwithshoulderimpingementsyndromeapilotstudy
AT marriotttb utilityoftheheatedlidocainetetracainepatchinthetreatmentofpainassociatedwithshoulderimpingementsyndromeapilotstudy
_version_ 1725427405434126336