Holistic Medicine - Ultrasound Directed Prolotherapy
What is Sclerotherapy?
Sclerotherapy, also known as prolotherapy (proliferative therapy), ligament reconstruction therapy, and fibro-osseous injection therapy, is a recognized orthopedic procedure that stimulates the body's natural healing processes to strengthen joints weak ended by traumatic or over-use injury. Joints weakened when ligaments or tendon attachments are stretched, torn, or fragmented, become hypermobile and painful. Traditional approaches with surgery and anti-inflammatory drugs often fail to stabilize the joint and relieve this pain permanently. Sclerotherapy, with its unique ability to directly address the cause of the instability, can repair the weakened sites and produce new fibrous tissues, resulting in permanent stabilization of the joint.
How does Sclerotherapy work?
With a precise injection of a mild irritant solution directly on the site of the torn or stretched ligament or tendon, sclerotherapy creates a mild, controlled injury that stimulates the body's natural healing mechanisms to lay down new tissue on the weakened area. The mild inflammatory response that is created by the injection encourages growth of the new ligament or tendon fibers, resulting in a tightening of the weakened structure. Additional treatments repeat this process, allowing the gradual buildup of tissue to restore the original strength to the area.
What is in the solution that is injected?
The sclerotherapy injections contain anesthetic agents and natural substances which stimulate the healing response. There are numerous substances, and each treating physician tailors the selection of substance according to the patient's need.
Is the Sclerotherapy treatment painful?
Any pain involving an injection will vary according to the structure to be treated, the choice of solution, and the skill of the physician administering the injection. The treatment may result in mild swelling and stiffness. The mild discomfort passes fairly rapidly and can be reduced with pain relievers such as Tylenol. Anti-inflammatory drugs such as aspirin and ibuprofen, should not be used for pain relief because their action suppresses the desired inflammatory process produced by the injection.
Can Sclerotherapy help everyone?
Each patient must be evaluated thoroughly with a patient history, physical exam, X-ray exam, and full laboratory work up before treatment will be administered. With this information your physician can evaluate your potential success with this therapy. Success depends on the factors with include the history of damage to the patient, the patient's overall health and ability to heal, and any underlying nutritional deficiencies that would impede the healing process.
Who administers Sclerotherapy?
Physicians who administer this form of therapy are trained by the American College of Osteopathic Pain Management & Sclerotherapy. Postgraduate training is a prerequisite before treating any patient with a medical orthopedic problem.
What areas of the body can be treated?
This form of therapy can be used to treat dislocations of the joints, knee pain, shoulder pain, Temporal Mandibular Joint dysfunction, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, and disc problems at any level of the spine. The therapy affects only the area treated and does not cause any problems in any other areas.
How often do I need these treatments?
The treatments should be administered every one, two or three weeks, as determined by your treating physician.
What's the rate of success in treatment?
The anticipated rate of success depends on a number of variables, including the patient's history and ability to heal, and the type of solution used. In patents with low back pain with hypermobility, 85% to 95% of patients treated experience remission of pain with this form of therapy. In comparison, the Journal of Bone and Joint Therapy report only a 52% improvement in patents treated surgically for disc involvement.
Is this form of therapy really new?
Sclerotherapy/prolotherapy has been used successfully as early as 500 B.C. when Roman soldiers with shoulder joint dislocations were treated with hot branding irons to help fuse the torn ligaments in the shoulder joint. Advances in medicines greatly improved on this process, and led to the modern techniques of strengthening the fibrous tissue rather than producing scarring to fuse tissues. In 1926, a group of physicians met with great success using injection therapy to treat hernias and hemorrhoids. Earl Gedney, D.O., a well-known Orthopedist, decreased his surgical practice and began to inject joints with these newer injectible medicines in the 1940s and 1950s. Also, in 1950, George Stuart Hackett, M.D., wrote a book on injection therapy. His work is still used today in training physicians. In the years since this early work, techniques and medications have advanced to move from a scarring or fusing effect to a strengthening effect, which restores the weakened joint to its original level of stability, without loss of flexibility and function.
Hippocrates described vein sclerotherapy around 400 B.C. using “slender instruments of iron” to treat varicose veins causing vein ulcers. Injection sclerotherapy of veins was first reported in 1623, and modern forms of injection sclerotherapy for varicose veins and similar diseases has been performed since the early 1900’s. Refinements and clinical study over the past few decades have dramatically improved our understanding of vein sclerotherapy, and improved the results.
Advanced Treatment for pain arising from:
- Whip-lash Injuries
- Shoulder Dislocation
- Herniated Discs
- Mid-level Backache
- Low-back Pain
- Compression Fractures
- Knee Conditions
- Tennis Elbow
- Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
- Varicose Vein Therapies
Related Resources on Proliferative Therapy:
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