Two clinical studies published in this issue of Joints deal with the complex issue of patellofemoral pain treatment. Enea et al[1] report the results obtained using distalization and medialization of the tibial
tuberosity, a surgical treatment for potential patellar instability (PPI) associated
with a particularly “challenging” predisposing factor, namely, the patella alta. The
index group (PPI group), consisting of patients with pain but no episodes of frank
patellar instability, was compared with a group of patients reporting pain and objective
patellar instability. The authors found that the treatment significantly reduced pain
and improved knee function in both groups. However, the improvement in subjective
instability was significantly more marked in the patients with PPI. In short, the
proposed treatment was found to be particularly effective in the treatment of patients
with PPI and patellofemoral pain.
The article by Uboldi et al,[2] concerns a prospective randomized trial on the efficacy of an elastomeric knee brace
used in the treatment of patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS) in adjunct to a specifically
developed rehabilitation program. Function was found to be significantly improved
both in the study group and in the controls (who only received rehabilitation); however,
use of the knee brace was associated with significantly reduced pain.
Patellofemoral pain is, undoubtedly, a clinical problem with a high social and economic
impact, given that it affects a young and active section of the population. Indeed,
in addition to rehabilitation treatment costs, it is also necessary to consider the
costs related to reduced productivity, due to days off work, and reduced work efficiency.
Undoubtedly, surgery, when indicated, is effective in resolving symptoms. However,
in most cases, the pain in PFPS is disabling, and surgical treatment, however adequately
it corrects the factors underlying the clinical presentation, is rather invasive and
not always predictable in terms of late sequelae. There have been few rigorous analyses
of exercise therapy for the treatment of PFPS. A Cochrane review[3] has highlighted the effectiveness of rehabilitation treatment in helping to reduce
knee pain and function in patients with PFPS. Tan et al[4] showed that annual direct medical costs are higher in patients receiving rehabilitation
treatment compared with those not receiving treatment, although the latter generate
higher social costs, in particular, deriving from loss of productivity and work efficiency.
Overall, therefore, rehabilitation treatment of PFPS has a favorable cost-effectiveness
ratio.
But what are we treating when we treat PFPS? A symptom or a disease? I certainly have
no intention of wading into the complex debate regarding the nomenclature and classification
of all those clinical situations in which patellofemoral pain, or anterior knee pain
as it may more generally be defined, can be recognized as a component. However, it
is certainly true that patellofemoral pain belongs to a category of chronic osteoarticular
pain that, over the years, has been the focus of a proliferation of therapeutic approaches
aimed primarily at treating the symptom rather than its cause, thereby interpreting
pain as a disease per se, rather than a sign of a problem. I am thinking, in particular,
of lower back pain, a clinical condition that nowadays often seems to be dealt independently
of its underlying organic cause, and that has attracted considerable attention from
pain therapists aiming to address chronic pain in a multidisciplinary framework in
which certain neuropathological mechanisms underlying pain, such as central sensitization,
cortical reorganization, neuroimmune dysregulation, and sympathetic nervous system
upregulation, are seen as possible treatment targets. Even the biopsychosocial approach
has been introduced into the multimodal management of chronic low back pain. A Medline
search using the terms “biopsychosocial & low back pain” will identify as many as
250 articles that approach the problem of low back pain from a sociocultural perspective.
Today, however, we can only wonder what became of the “bio” part of chronic pain treatment,[5] while fortunately, or unfortunately, use of the biopsychosocial approach in the
field of patellofemoral pain is limited to a single study.[6]
We must certainly avoid accepting, uncritically, the idea that “pain equals damage”;
after all, were this the case, it would be impossible to understand why chronic pain
is not constantly and consistently unbearable! As Patrick Wall pointed out 30 years
ago, “the labeling of nociceptors as pain fibers was not an admirable simplification,
but an unfortunate trivialization under the guise of simplification.”[7] However, if we allow pain to become a disease and no longer a symptom, we risk neglecting
the primary source of the alarm signal that our body is sending out, with the consequent
risk of allowing the development of a chronic disease with a subclinical course or,
even worse, a silent but devastating worsening of anatomical damage at the site of
origin of the pain.