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Compton Ass Terry
24-11-2004, 05:11 PM
Yo g's, here is another smack upside the head for NSAID's from the American Journal Sports Medicine. They are not even up to Compton standards.

And Snuffy - how's the research coming on dog?! Send some product west side! Holla Holla!

Represent

Compton Ass Terry




Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs and Acetaminophen in the Treatment of an Acute Muscle Injury
Frank T. G. Rahusen, MD1, Paul S. Weinhold, PhD2, Louis C. Almekinders, MD3*

Background: Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are frequently used to treat muscle injuries in athletes. It is not known whether the anti-inflammatory effects of these drugs are important or whether their effectiveness is a result of their central analgesic effect.

Hypothesis: The effects of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are no different than the effects of an analgesic (acetaminophen) without anti-inflammatory action in an experimental, acute muscle contusion model.

Study Design: Controlled animal study.

Methods: A standardized, unilateral, nonpenetrating injury was created to the tibialis anterior muscle of 96 adult male mice. Four treatment groups were used: group 1, placebo treatment; group 2, treatment with rofecoxib, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug with cyclooxygenase-2 selectivity, and treatment after the injury; group 3, rofecoxib treatment starting 24 hours before the injury; and group 4, acetaminophen treatment after the injury. The muscle and the contralateral normal muscle were evaluated at 2, 5, and 7 days after injury by grading of gait, wet weight as a measure of edema, and histologic evaluation.

Results: Group 1 had significantly more gait disturbances at day 2 than all other groups (P < .05). No differences were found at days 5 and 7. Wet weights showed an increase at day 2 in group 1 (P < .01). Again, no differences were found at days 5 and 7. Histology revealed similar inflammatory changes at day 2 in all groups, with regeneration of muscle fibers at days 5 and 7.

Conclusions: The results indicate that rofecoxib as a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug and acetaminophen as a non-nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug analgesic have similar effects. The lack of differences in wet weights and histology suggests that the anti-inflammatory effects of rofecoxib are not an important feature of its action.

Clinical Relevance: The routine use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in muscle injuries may need to be critically evaluated because low-cost and low-risk analgesics may be just as effective.


Key Words: muscle injury, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), acetaminophen, soft tissue, contusion

Compton Ass Terry
24-11-2004, 05:18 PM
Another thing J.O, what is the G-O with AJSM, shouldn't they call it the J of all things ACL/PCL/meniscal orthopaedics?? There's more knee papers coming out than people with knee injuries.

Shoot us a line when you are in the hood.

injuryupdate
28-11-2004, 06:51 PM
Don't participate in the funeral march for NSAIDs just yet. They thin the blood, so the evidence is that everyone should be taking an NSAID (maybe aspirin admittedly) once they get to the age where their no. 1 risk of dying is through cardiovascular causes.

There is something that NSAIDs do (and cortisone as well) that helps injuries that we don't fully understand - because left to their own devices athletes will choose them over paracetamol on most occasions.

Good to see the American Journal of I-just-bought-a-new-BMW-on-the-back-of-the-number-of-knee-arthroscopes-I-did-last-year is also reporting on NSAIDs.