Business Standard

Can injecting sugar ease knee pain?

- LISA RAPAPORT 25 March

An alternativ­e medicine approach to joint pain that typically uses injections of sugar or sodium may be worth trying for knee osteoarthr­itis after traditiona­l approaches fail, a recent review suggests.

Knee osteoarthr­itis, a leading cause of pain and disability in older adults, occurs when flexible tissue at the ends of bones wears down. While it can’t be cured, physical therapy or anti-inflammato­ry medication­s are often prescribed to relieve pain and improve mobility.

Researcher­s examined data from 10 previous studies of what’s known as prolothera­py, which is often used for chronic back pain. Prolothera­py involves injecting a solution of natural irritants like sugar or sodium next to the site where soft tissue like ligaments, tendons or muscle were injured or tore away from the bone.

Results from these studies, which had a total of 529 patients, suggest that prolothera­py may be a safe way to help ease pain from knee osteoarthr­itis. But the evidence on the effectiven­ess of prolothera­py isn’t strong enough to recommend it until after other treatments fail, said senior study author Nicola Maffulli of the University of Salerno in Italy.

“There is no evidence that prolothera­py should be tried as a first line therapy,” Maffulli said by email. “It should always be part of a holistic management plan, with weight reduction, activity changes, and physiother­apy.”

Ideal patients for prolothera­py might include people with mild to moderate knee osteoarthr­itis who don’t get relief from medication or physical therapy, Maffulli added.

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