141297

Effect of Ultrasound-Guided Injection of Local Ozone or Platelet Rich Plasma Versus Corticosteroid in Plantar Fasciitis

Article

Last updated: 03 Jan 2025

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Abstract

ABSTRAC.
Background :
Plantar fasciitis or recently called plantar fasciopathy, generally observed with heel spurs because of the deposition of calcium, although the definite pathology is still unknown. Ultrasound-guided injection of conventional corticosteroids was the primary treatment modality, with other emerging substances (e.g. Ozone or Platelet Rich Plasma PRP).
 
Aim of the study:
This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of ultrasound-guided injection of local Ozone or Platelet Rich Plasma (PRP) versus conventional corticosteroid in the management of plantar fasciitis.
 
Patient and methods:
this a randomized Prospective comparative study has done Al-Azhar university hospitals (Al-Hussein and Sayed Galal), where fifty-one patients have been diagnosed to have plantar fasciitis were included and allocated into one of three groups (17 patients in each group) to receive an ultrasound-guided injection of corticosteroid (control group), platelet-rich plasma (PRP) or Ozone O2-O3. Clinical evaluation and ultrasonographic measurement of the plantar fascia thickness was done before, at one, three and six months next to the injection. Primary outcome included: pain score using the visual analogue score (VAS). While secondary outcomes were plantar fascia thickness and foot quality health status.
 
Results:
There was a highly significant decrease in VAS score and plantar fascia thickness, and an increase in foot pain domain of the foot health status (FHSQ) score in corticosteroid and Ozone groups (p < 0.01 respectively) in one month. Regarding 3-month results, there was a highly significant decrease in VAS score plantar fascia thickness, and an increase in FHSQ score in the corticosteroid group (p < 0.01 respectively). Regarding long-term 6-month results, there was a highly significant decrease in VAS score, plantar fascia thickness, and an increase in FHSQ score in the PRP group (p < 0.01 respectively).
 
Conclusion:
Corticosteroid and Ozone injections were effective at short-term assessment, but PRP was more valuable at long-term assessment regarding pain management in plantar fasciitis patients.
 

DOI

10.21608/aimj.2021.52095.1368

Keywords

Plantar fasciitis, Ultrasound, Corticosteroids, Ozone, Platelet- Rich Plasma

Authors

First Name

Ahmed

Last Name

Elsawy

MiddleName

Gamal

Affiliation

Anesthesia and Intensive Care Department, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University

Email

drahmedelsawy@azhar.edu.eg

City

cairo

Orcid

0000-0001-7075-7963

First Name

hesham

Last Name

Abdelraouf

MiddleName

said

Affiliation

Anesthesia and intensive care Department, Faculty of medicine, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt.

Email

hishamsaid61@yahoo.com

City

giza

Orcid

-

Volume

1

Article Issue

12

Related Issue

21754

Issue Date

2020-12-01

Receive Date

2020-12-03

Publish Date

2020-12-01

Page Start

224

Page End

230

Print ISSN

2682-3381

Online ISSN

2682-339X

Link

https://aimj.journals.ekb.eg/article_141297.html

Detail API

https://aimj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=141297

Order

3

Type

Original Article

Type Code

710

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Al-Azhar International Medical Journal

Publication Link

https://aimj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Effect of Ultrasound-Guided Injection of Local Ozone or Platelet Rich Plasma Versus Corticosteroid in Plantar Fasciitis

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023