Journal of Pain Research (Jul 2013)

Heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch for treatment of patellar tendinopathy pain

  • Gammaitoni AR,
  • Goitz HT,
  • Marsh S,
  • Marriott TB,
  • Galer BS

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2013, no. default
pp. 565 – 570

Abstract

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Arnold R Gammaitoni,1 Henry T Goitz,2 Stephanie Marsh,2 Thomas B Marriott,3 Bradley S Galer1 1Pain Group, Nuvo Research US, West Chester, PA, USA; 2Sports Medicine, Detroit Medical Center, Warren, MI, USA; 3Pain Group, Nuvo Research US, Salt Lake City, UT, USA Introduction: The pain of patellar tendinopathy (PT) may be mediated by neuronal glutamate and sodium channels. Lidocaine and tetracaine block both of these channels. This study tested the self-heated lidocaine-tetracaine patch (HLT patch) in patients with PT confirmed by physical examination to determine if the HLT patch might relieve pain and improve function. Methods: Thirteen patients with PT pain of ≥14 days' duration and baseline average pain scores ≥4 (on a 0–10 scale) enrolled in and completed this prospective, single-center pilot study. Patients applied one HLT patch to the affected knee twice daily for 2–4 hours for a total of 14 days. Change in average pain intensity and interference (Victorian Institute of Sport Assessment [VISA]) scores from baseline to day 14 were assessed. No statistical inference testing was performed. Results: Average pain scores declined from 5.5 ± 1.3 (mean ± standard deviation) at baseline to 3.8 ± 2.5 on day 14. Similarly, VISA scores improved from 45.2 ± 14.4 at baseline to 54.3 ± 24.5 on day 14. A clinically important reduction in pain score (≥30%) was demonstrated by 54% of patients. Conclusion: The results of this pilot study suggest that topical treatment that targets neuronal sodium and glutamate channels may be useful in the treatment of PT. Keywords: patellar tendinopathy, patellar tendinosis, heated lidocaine/tetracaine patch, topical analgesic patch, knee pain