Conceptualisation of a region-based group of musculoskeletal pain conditions as ‘tibial loading pain’ and systematic review of effects of load-modifying interventions

Thorlene Egerton, David Donkin, Sia Kazantzis, Hannah Ware, Sonya Moore*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Objectives: Conceptualisation of a clinically-relevant group of conditions as a region-based, load-related musculoskeletal pain condition (‘tibial loading pain’) to enable identification of evidence of treatment effect from load-modifying interventions. Design: Systematic review and evidence synthesis based on a developed and justified theoretical position. Methods: Musculoskeletal pain localised to the tibial (shin) region and consistent with clinical presentations of an exercise/activity-related onset mechanism, was conceptualised as a group of conditions (‘tibial loading pain’) that could be reasoned to respond to load modifying interventions. Five databases were searched for randomized controlled studies investigating any load-modifying intervention for pain in the anterior–anteromedial lower leg (shin). Study quality was evaluated (Risk of Bias Tool Version 2) and level of certainty for the findings assessed. Results: Six studies reporting seven comparisons were included. Interventions included braces, anti-pronation taping, compression stocking and a stretch + strengthening programme. All included studies were assessed as having unclear or high risk of bias. The review found no evidence of beneficial effect from any of the load-modifying interventions on symptoms, physical performance or biomechanical measures, apart from a possible benefit of anti-pronation ‘kinesio’ taping. There was very low certainty evidence that kinesio taping improves pain and pain-free hopping distance after one week. The braces were associated with minor adverse effects and problems with acceptability. Conclusions: None of the treatments investigated by the included studies can be recommended. Conceptualisation of the problem as regional, primarily loading-related pain rather than as multiple distinct pathoanatomically-based conditions, and clearer load-modifying hypotheses for interventions are recommended.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)46-52
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of Science and Medicine in Sport
Volume25
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2022

Keywords

  • Athletic injuries
  • Medial tibial stress syndrome
  • Overuse injury
  • Shin pain
  • Sports injuries
  • Tibia

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