Is musculoskeletal pain associated with increased muscle stiffness? Evidence map and critical appraisal of muscle measurements using shear wave elastography

Author:

Haueise Andreas1ORCID,Le Sant Guillaume23ORCID,Eisele‐Metzger Angelika45ORCID,Dieterich Angela V.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Health, Security, Society Furtwangen University Furtwangen Germany

2. CHU Nantes, Movement–Interactions–Performance, MIP Nantes Université Nantes France

3. School of Physiotherapy IFM3R St‐Sebastien/Loire France

4. Institute for Evidence in Medicine, Medical Center, Faculty of Medicine University of Freiburg Freiburg Germany

5. Cochrane Germany Cochrane Germany Foundation Freiburg Germany

Abstract

AbstractIntroduction and AimsApproximately 21% of the world's population suffers from musculoskeletal conditions, often associated with sensations of stiff muscles. Targeted therapy requires knowing whether typically involved muscles are objectively stiffer compared to asymptomatic individuals. Muscle stiffness is quantified using ultrasound shear wave elastography (SWE). Publications on SWE‐based comparisons of muscle stiffness between individuals with and without musculoskeletal pain are increasing rapidly. This work reviewed and mapped the existing evidence regarding objectively measured muscle stiffness in musculoskeletal pain conditions and surveyed current methods of applying SWE to measure muscle stiffness.MethodsA systematic search was conducted in PubMed and CINAHL using the keywords “muscle stiffness”, “shear wave elastography”, “pain”, “asymptomatic controls” and synonyms. The search was supplemented by a hand search using Google Scholar. Included articles were critically appraised with the AXIS tool, supplemented by items related to SWE methods. Results were visually mapped and narratively described.ResultsThirty of 137 identified articles were included. High‐quality evidence was missing. The results comprise studies reporting lower stiffness in symptomatic participants, no differences between groups and higher stiffness in symptomatic individuals. Results differed between pain conditions and muscles, and also between studies that examined the same muscle(s) and pathology. The methods of the application of SWE were inconsistent and the reporting was often incomplete.ConclusionsExisting evidence regarding the objective stiffness of muscles in musculoskeletal pain conditions is conflicting. Methodological differences may explain most of the inconsistencies between findings. Methodological standards for SWE measurements of muscles are urgently required.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),General Medicine,Physiology,General Medicine

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