Myofascial pain – A major player in musculoskeletal pain

Elsevier

Available online 21 April 2024, 101944

Best Practice & Research Clinical RheumatologyAuthor links open overlay panel, , , , , Abstract

Myofascial pain is a soft tissue pain syndrome with local and referred musculoskeletal pain arising from trigger points. Myofascial pain and myofascial pain syndromes are among some of the most common acute and chronic pain conditions. Myofascial pain can exist independently of other pain generators or can coexist with or is secondary to other acute and chronic painful musculoskeletal conditions. Myofascial pain is most effectively treated with a multimodal treatment plan including injection therapy (known as trigger point injections, physical therapy, postural or ergonomic correction, and treatment of underlying musculoskeletal pain generators. The objectives of this review are to outline the prevalence of myofascial pain, describe the known pathophysiology of myofascial pain and trigger points, discuss the clinical presentation of myofascial pain, and present evidence-based best practices for pharmacologic, non-pharmacologic, and interventional treatments for myofascial pain.

Keywords

Myofascial pain

Piriformis syndrome

Trigger point injection

Botulinum toxin

Corticosteroid

Local anesthetic

© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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