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Journal of Clinical Medicine logoLink to Journal of Clinical Medicine
. 2022 Mar 17;11(6):1666. doi: 10.3390/jcm11061666

Does Additional Dietary Supplementation Improve Physiotherapeutic Treatment Outcome in Tendinopathy? A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Fanji Qiu 1, Jinfeng Li 2, Kirsten Legerlotz 1,*
Editor: Marco Alessandro Minetto
PMCID: PMC8950117  PMID: 35329992

Abstract

A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials was performed to evaluate the effects of dietary supplements in addition to physiotherapeutic treatment on pain and functional outcomes. PubMed, The Cochrane Library, Web of Science, and Embase were searched from inception to November 2021 (Prospero registration: CRD42021291951). Studies were eligible if the interventions consisted of physiotherapeutic approaches that were combined with dietary supplementation and if they reported measures of pain and/or function. Six studies were included in the meta-analysis. Standardized mean differences (SMD) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated and analysed using a Review Manager software. Subgroup analysis was performed to explore possible associations between the study characteristics and the effectiveness of the intervention. Additional dietary supplementation during physiotherapeutic treatment significantly improved the reduction in pain score (SMD = −0.74, 95% CI, −1.37 to −0.10; p < 0.05), while it had no effect on functional outcomes (SMD = 0.29, 95% CI, 0.00 to 0.58; p > 0.05). This systematic review and meta-analysis suggests that additional nutritional interventions may improve physiotherapeutic treatment outcomes in the management of tendinopathies.

Keywords: nutrition, tendinopathy, tendon pain, exercise therapy, meta-analysis, VISA, VAS

1. Introduction

Tendinopathy is a common tendon disorder accounting for around 30% of complaints related to musculoskeletal pain and functional limitations [1]. The aetiology of this tendon pathology is multifactorial, including mechanical overuse [1,2] and metabolic disorders [3,4,5]. Usually, tendinopathies are characterized by tendon pain and impaired function, which also leads to a reduction in exercise participation in tendinopathic patients [6]. In the last few years, the incidence of tendinopathies in athletes and in the general population has increased [7], with the increases in physical activity, changes in lifestyle and side effects of medication being discussed as potentially influencing factors [7,8,9,10].

In the management of tendinopathies, a variety of physiotherapy treatment methods have been applied, including extracorporeal shock wave [11] and manual therapy [12] as well as exercise interventions such as heavy slow resistance training [13,14] and eccentric training [15,16].

In recent years, dietary supplements have been introduced as an additional therapeutic approach in the treatment of tendinopathies, and their positive curative effects have been reported for both the general population and athletes [17,18,19,20]. The applied dietary supplements contained a variety of micronutrients (e.g., bromelain and vitamin C) [21,22,23], which are suggested to reduce the level of inflammation [24,25,26] and to promote the healing of the tendon [21,22,27,28,29,30]. Because of the suggested anti-inflammatory effects and claimed improvements in tendon metabolism, treatments that combine dietary supplements with physiotherapy have been explored in some studies [23,31,32,33,34,35,36].

The combination treatment of dietary supplementation and physiotherapy has been evaluated in a series of clinical trials due to these compelling rationales. Considering that individual trials are unlikely to provide sufficient evidence to guide clinical practice, we attempted to objectively evaluate the potential impact of this treatment strategy in tendinopathy management, to provide a higher level of clinical evidence. Thus, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials to assess the effect of additional dietary supplementation in combination with physiotherapy treatment on the key outcomes of tendinopathy treatment such as pain and function in comparison to physiotherapeutic treatment alone or physiotherapeutic treatment with placebo.

2. Methods

This systematic review and meta-analysis adhered to the PRISMA statement [37] and was registered at Prospero (CRD42021291951) in the international prospective register of systematic reviews in November 2021.

2.1. Eligibility Criteria

2.1.1. Participants

Studies were eligible if participants were aged under 70 years. No restrictions on gender, ethnicity, or sport participation were applied.

2.1.2. Interventions

Studies were eligible if the interventions consisted of any kind of physiotherapeutic approaches (e.g., eccentric training, shockwave or laser therapy), which were combined with dietary supplementation. The intervention programs were required to last at least 4 weeks and were conducted in any setting (e.g., laboratory, home, gym).

2.1.3. Comparisons

The control groups for comparison were subjected to physiotherapy alone or to physiotherapy and placebo treatment.

2.1.4. Outcomes

Studies were eligible if they reported at least one outcome of interest, which were measures of pain and/or function. We selected NRS (Numerical Rating Scales) and VAS (Visual Analogue Scales) scores as assessment of pain. These two measures were synthesized, as recent studies have shown that NRS and VAS scores, both ranging from 0 to 10, correspond to each other [38]. In addition, we assessed reliable and valid functional outcome scores [39,40,41,42,43,44], including the Victorian Institute of Sports Assessment for Achilles or Patellar Tendon (VISA-A and VISA-P), the Shoulder Pain and Disability Index (SPADI) and the Ankle–Hindfoot Scale (AHS).

2.1.5. Study Design

Inclusion criteria: studies were randomized controlled trials (RCTs) published in English. Exclusion criteria: (1) duplicate publications; (2) literature review papers; (3letters to the editor; (4) abstracts published in conference proceedings; (5) animal model studies. Articles with the full text unavailable were also excluded.

2.2. Search Strategy and Study Selection

We selected relevant studies published before November 2021, by searching PubMed, Cochrane, Embase, and Web of Science databases. We applied the English language, and the search keywords included population (e.g., tendinopathy) and intervention (e.g., dietary supplement). For PubMed, we used the Mesh Database, combined Mesh terms and entry terms, and made some adjustments in other databases. Moreover, we applied the filters: randomized controlled trial (publication types), randomized (title/abstract), or placebo (title/abstract) when appropriate. The precise search strategy is described in the supplemental file (Table S1). All the results were collated by a reference management tool (Endnote X9, Thomson Reuters, NY, USA), and duplicates were removed. We considered all potentially eligible studies. In addition, we performed a manual search using the references of key articles. Two authors (F.Q., J.L.) independently reviewed study titles and abstracts retrieved, to include the articles that satisfied the requirements, and then read the full texts for final eligibility. Any disagreements were resolved by consensus with the third reviewer (K.L.).

2.3. Data Extraction

Data extraction and results compilation were performed by two independent reviewers (F.Q., J.L.), and data were extracted into Microsoft Excel. In case of disagreement, a third researcher (K.L.) intervened. As no original data on of pain scores and functional outcomes were provided in the studies of Juhasz et al. [31] and Praet et al. [35], the values were extracted from the reported graphs using Graph digitizer software (Digitizelt, Braunschweig, Germany). Data extracted from the studies included the following information: lead author, year of publication; demographic characteristics (age, gender); sample size in the experimental and control groups; study groups; intervention characteristics: type of tendinopathy (e.g., Achilles tendon, rotator cuff), intervention duration (in weeks); type of population (athletic or non-athletic), type of physiotherapy (e.g., strength training, shock wave or laser therapy) and reported outcomes (pain and function); symptom duration; time points of measurement; pharmaceutical company supplying the nutritional supplements; composition of supplements; assumed effect of supplement.

2.4. Quality Assessment and Risk of Bias

The included studies were assessed according to the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool [45]. The following domains were assessed: (1) random sequence generation; (2) concealment of allocation; (3) blinding of participants, investigators, and assessors; (4) blinding of outcome assessment; (5) incomplete outcome data processed; (6) selective reporting bias; (7) other bias. The domains were given a rating of low (+), unclear (?), or high risk (−) of bias.

No funnel plots were graphed for any of the comparisons, given that the number of studies in each comparison was less than 10 [46]. For sensitivity analysis [47], we evaluated the robustness of the pooled results by exclusion-by-exclusion, removing one study data from the pooled analysis at a time to evaluate the consistency between the pooled results of the remaining studies and the pooled results of all studies.

2.5. Statistical Analysis

The meta-analysis was performed using the Review Manager software version 5.4 (The Cochrane Collaboration, Copenhagen, Denmark). As the Victorian Institute of Sports Assessment–Achilles questionnaire (VISA-A), the Shoulder Pain and Disability Index (SPADI) and the Ankle–Hindfoot Scale (AHS) were not assessed by using consistent forms of measurement, standardized mean differences (SMD) were applied. All results are expressed as mean difference (MD) with standard deviation (SD) and were reported with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). The interquartile ranges and 95% CIs with standard errors were calculated with the appropriate formulas to convert them to means and standard errors (SDs) [48]. Random-effects and fixed-effects models were used to estimate pooled effects by accounting for study differences and weighting each study accordingly. We used the Cochran Q test [49] and I2 testing [50] to assess the magnitude of the heterogeneity between studies, with I2 greater than 50% or a p value at or less than 0.10 in Q test, indicating the presence of moderate-to-high heterogeneity. Subgroup analyses were conducted to explore possible associations between the study characteristics and the effectiveness of the intervention. Study characteristics included type of tendinopathy (Achilles tendon, other type), intervention duration (≤8 weeks or >8 weeks), type of physiotherapy (exercise therapy, ultrasound (US), extracorporeal shockwave therapy (ESWT)) and type of population (athletic, non-athletic). For subgroup analysis, statistical significance was established at an alpha level of 0.05.

3. Results

3.1. Search Yield

We identified a total of 94 potentially eligible articles during the trial selection process. Sixty-two articles remained for screening after removing duplicates. After screening titles and abstracts, six articles [23,31,32,33,34,35,36] were included in the meta-analysis (Figure 1). From all included studies, an experimental group of 123 people and a control group of 118 people were evaluated in this meta-analysis.

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Study selection process (according to the PRISMA guidelines).

3.2. Characteristics of Included Studies

Summed up, the six studies (Table 1) included 241 participants, with the mean (SD) age ranging from 14.8 (1.6) to 55.8 (13.2) years. The six studies applied six different commercially available dietary supplements (Table 2). The duration of the intervention in the six articles ranged from 4 to 12 weeks, while the symptom duration ranged from 4 weeks to 3 years. The time from the start of the intervention to the end point of the intervention or follow-up respectively ranged from 32 days to 1 year. Five of the included studies examined indices of pain [23,31,32,34,36], and four examined indices of function [23,34,35,36]. The interventions in all six studies compared dietary supplementation combined with physiotherapy and placebo combined with physiotherapy or physiotherapy alone. Two trials combined dietary supplementation with ESWT (extracorporeal shockwave therapy) or therapeutic ultrasound; four trials combined dietary supplementation with exercise therapy. In the study by Balius et al. [23], before being randomly assigned to the intervention group, the subjects were classified according to the pathology model of Cook and Purdam [51] as suffering from reactive or degenerative tendinopathy. Data of six experimental groups were included in the pooled analysis of the pain score, and data of five groups were included in the pooled analysis of the functional outcome.

Table 1.

Characteristics of included studies.

First Author (Year) Tendon Investigated Study Groups Sample Size (n) Type of Population Mean Age (Years; Mean ± SD) Intervention Duration (Weeks) Symptom Duration (Months) Time Points of Measurement
Balius et al. (2016) Achilles tendon
(mid-portion)
MCVC + EC 17 non-athletic 43.5 ± 14.5 12 >3 baseline, 6 and 12 w
EC 20 38.9 ± 6.6
Juhasz et al. (2018) Musculus flexor hallucis longus Creatine 9 athletic 15.5 ± 1.4 6 1–1.5 2, 4 and 6 w
Placebo 9 14.8 ± 1.6
Mavrogenis et al. (2004) Patellar & several upper body tendons * EFA, AO and US 17 athletic 31 5 >3 8, 16, 24 and 32 d
Placebo and US 14 32
Notarnicola et al. (2012) Achilles tendon (insertional) ESWT and tenosan 32 non-athletic 55.8 ± 13.2 8 >6 2 and 6 m
ESWT and placebo 32
Praet et al.
(2019)
Achilles tendon
(mid-portion)
TENDOFORTE + EccEx 10 non-athletic 45.3 ± 6.4 12 18 3 and 6 m
Placebo + EccEx 10 42.0 ± 9.4
Sandford et al. (2018) Rotator cuff PUFAs 38 non-athletic 52.2 ± 12.0 8 >3 8 w, 3, 6 and 12 m
Placebo 35 52.0 ± 16.2

d, days; m, months; w, weeks; AO, antioxidants; EC/EccEx, eccentric exercise; EFA, essential fatty acids; ESWT, extracorporeal shockwave therapy; MCVC, mucopolisaccharides, type I collagen, and vitamin C; PUFAs, polyunsaturated fatty acids; US, ultrasound; *, upper body tendons: supraspinatus, biceps, lateral epicondyle extensormedial epicondyle flexor, and infraspinatus.

Table 2.

Details of dietary Supplements.

First Author (Year) Dietary Supplements (Company) Ingredients of Dietary Supplement Assumed Effect of Supplement
Balius et al. (2016) TendoActive
(Bioiberica SA, Palafolls, Spain)
mucopolysaccharides, collagen type I, vitamin C suppression of NF-κB mediated IL-1ß catabolic signalling pathways in tenocytes
Juhasz et al. (2018) Micronized Cr monohydrate
(BioTech, Inc., Ft. Lauderdale, FL, USA)
Cr monohydrate, dextrose, and vitamin C reduction of inflammatory markers
Mavrogenis et al. (2004) Bio-Sport
(Pharma Nord ApS, Vejle, Denmark)
EPA, DHA and GLA. selenium, zinc, vitamin A, vitamin B6, vitamin C and vitamin E reduction of inflammation caused by essential fatty acids and antioxidants
Notarnicola et al. (2012) Tenosan
(Agave s.r.l., Prato, Italy)
arginine-L-alpha-ketoglutarate, MSM, hydrolysed collagen type I, Vinitrox, bromelain, and vitamin C stimulation of metabolism and proliferation; reduction of inflammation and neoangiogenesis
Praet et al. (2019) TENDOFORTE® (GELITA AG, Eberbach, Germany) Hydrolysed specific collagen peptides stimulation of collagen type I and III, proteoglycans and elastin content synthesis by sCPs; reduction of TNF-alpha, matrix metalloproteases and stimulation of tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases by Glycine
Sandford et al. (2018) MaxEPA
(Seven Seas Ltd., Hull, UK)
EPA, DHA and vitamin E acetate reduction of inflammation

Cr, creatine; DHA, docosahexaenoic acid; EPA, eicosapentaenoic acid; GLA, gamma-linolenic acid; sCP, specific collagen peptides.

3.3. Assessment of Risk of Bias

According to the Cochrane Risk of Bias tool, one article was evaluated as high risk of bias in randomization for grouping patients according to age (Table 3). Group allocation was clearly stated in half of the included articles [32,35,36]. Three studies were evaluated as low risk in terms of blinding. Regarding detection bias, three articles were evaluated as low risk. One study was assessed as high risk in reporting bias, as the overall effect of treatment was not reported. Two articles were evaluated as high risk of bias due to the financial support from the pharmaceutical company that was supplying the nutritional supplement.

Table 3.

Risk of bias assessment for RCTs according to the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool.

First Author (year) Random Sequence Generation (Selection Bias) Allocation Concealment (Selection Bias) Blinding of Participants and Personnel (Performance Bias) Blinding of Outcome Assessment (Detection Bias) Incomplete Outcome Data (Attrition Bias) Selective Reporting (Reporting Bias) Other Bias
Balius et al. (2016) + - - - ? - -
Juhasz et al. (2018) ? ? ? ? + + +
Mavrogenis et al. (2004) + + + + - + ?
Notarnicola et al. (2012) - ? + ? - + -
Praet et al. (2019) + + + + + + +
Sandford et al. (2018) + + + + + + +

-, high risk of bias; +, low risk of bias; ?, unclear risk of bias, as paper contained insufficient information to permit judgement.

Further sensitivity analysis and exclusion-by-exclusion of the literature led to significant changes in the results of the pain score and functional outcomes, which were caused by the studies by Notarnicola et al. [34] and Sandford et al. [36], respectively. Although high heterogeneity (I2 = 77%) was found in the pain score, all five trials showed a significant reduction in the pain score with additional dietary supplementation.

3.4. Meta-Analysis

3.4.1. Analysis of Pain Score at Rest

Five experiments with a total of 221 participants provided data on pain score at rest. The pooled analysis of five trials (Figure 2) revealed that the combination of dietary supplementation and physiotherapy led to a greater mean reduction in pain score than physiotherapy alone (SMD = −0.74, 95%CI, −1.37 to −0.10). In the subgroup analysis (Table 4) of types of tendinopathy, intervention duration, physiotherapy type, and type of population, we observed no significant effects.

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Forest plot of the meta-analysis on pain score at rest. Pain score measurement include NRS and VAS scales.

Table 4.

Results of subgroup analysis.

Study Characteristics Studies Pain at Rest p Value Functional Outcomes
Effect Size (95%CI) Studies Effect Size (95%CI) p Value
Type of Tendinopathy
Achilles Tendon 2 −0.41 (−0.83, 0.00) >0.05 3 0.53 (0.16, 0.90) 0.005
Other Type 2 −1.72 (−3.72, 0.28) >0.05 - - -
Intervention Duration
≤8 weeks 4 −0.88 (−1.78, 0.08) >0.05 2 0.28 (−0.06, 0.62) >0.05
>8 weeks 2 0.32 (−0.22, 0.86) >0.05
Type of physiotherapy
Exercise therapy 3 −0.26 (−0.62, 0.09) >0.05 3 0.09 (−0.26, 0.44) > 0.05
ESWT/US 2 −1.53 (−3.83, 0.78) >0.05 - - -
Type of population
Athletic 2 −1.72 (−3.72, 0.28) >0.05 - - -
Non-athletic 3 −0.26 (−0.57, 0.05) >0.05 4 0.29 (0.00, 0.58) >0.05

3.4.2. Analysis of Functional Outcomes

Four RCTs with a total of 194 participants provided data on functional outcomes. The pooled analysis (Figure 3) revealed that the combination of dietary supplementation and physiotherapy led to no superior improvement in functional outcomes compared to physiotherapy alone (SMD = 0.29, 95%CI, 0.00 to 0.58). In the subgroup analysis (Table 4), we observed a greater effect of physiotherapy alone in Achilles tendinopathy (p = 0.005).

Figure 3.

Figure 3

Forest plot of the meta-analysis on functional outcomes. Functional outcomes include VISA-A, SPADI and AHS.

4. Discussion

In the management of tendinopathy, the reduction of pain and the improvement of function are the aims of different treatment methods [6,52,53,54,55,56,57,58]. Within this context, a novel strategy that applied dietary supplementation additional to physiotherapy was evaluated. Our meta-analysis has shown that additional nutritional interventions can reduce pain further than physiotherapy alone, while a significant improvement in function could not be detected.

Additional nutritional interventions may be an effective strategy to improve pain reduction in patients with tendinopathies. The mechanism by which the ingestion of nutritional supplements improves tendinopathy symptoms may be linked to the capacity of certain ingredients in affecting inflammation. While all six RCTs included in our meta-analysis applied a different supplement, five studies [23,31,32,34,36] applied supplements which contained substances of known anti-inflammatory function, and all six papers explained assumed effects with a reduction in inflammation or inflammatory markers.

Inflammation is strongly associated with pain production [59,60]. In addition, it may play an important role in the development of tendinopathies [14,61]. Therefore, downregulation of inflammation levels induced by anti-inflammatory ingredients could be a potential mechanism to consider in tendinopathy management. The pain-reducing effect of nutritional interventions addressing inflammation has been shown for a variety of supplements in a variety of tendon related pathologies. In patients with lateral epicondylitis and shoulder and Achilles tendinopathy [62], Tendisulfur® supplementation for 60 days led to a drop in VAS, possibly due to the downregulation of NF-κB, TNF-α and IL-6. Furthermore, in patients subjected to supraspinatus tendon repair [33], two months of supplementation with Tendisulfur® resulted in a significant reduction in the VAS score, which was assumed to be related to the inhibition the NF-κB pathway by boswellia serrata and curcuma longa within the supplement. In patients with shoulder, knee, elbow and hip tendinopathy, a recent study [63] has shown that one-month supplementation with curcuminoids and boswellia serrata extracts significantly reduced the VAS score. They explained this effect by the anti-inflammatory activity of curcuma longa and boswellia serrata extracts. In patients subjected to rotator cuff tear repair [64], a three-month supplementation with tenosan significantly reduced the pain scores in patients. The authors suggested that the supplement may have resulted in an inhibitory effect on the generation of bradykinin and catabolic signalling pathways in tenocytes [64]. In patients with Achilles tendinopathy, a 12-week intervention with a supplement containing collagen peptide type-1, low molecular weight chondroitin sulphate, sodium hyaluronate, and vitamin C led to a significant decrease in the VAS score [65]. The authors suggested that the therapeutic effects may be associated with an improvement in the glycosaminoglycan composition and collagen synthesis of the tendon by the ingredients of the supplementation [65].

The pain-reducing effects of nutritional supplements have also been observed in patients with other musculoskeletal injuries. In patients with mild knee pain, using low-fat yoghurt supplemented with rooster comb extract for 12 weeks led to a significant improvement in pain, possibly caused by a decrease in inflammation [66]. In patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS), 12 weeks supplementation with an extract of salmon’s milt reduced the pain severity score significantly [67]. This may have been caused by an inhibition of inflammation, as indicated by dropped serum levels of the tumour necrosis factor (TNF) and substance P [67]. While further research is needed to explore the effectiveness of the specific components within the supplementation, it appears that nutritional interventions, which contain substances addressing inflammation, have the potential to speed up the recovery of musculoskeletal injuries and to improve the therapeutic response in terms of pain reduction [23,31,32,33,34,35,36,62,68].

Despite a reduction in pain, nutritional supplementation during exercise therapy does not seem to further enhance functional outcomes in tendinopathy patients. While two comparative studies [28,62] have reported significant improvements in functional scales and pain in patients with Achilles, patellar and rotator cuff tendinopathy after receiving nutritional supplementation, the results of the RCTs do not point in the same direction. Our subgroup analysis of RCTs investigating Achilles tendinopathy was in favour of physiotherapy alone. A reduction in pain does not necessarily translate into an improvement in function, which has been reported in various studies. In patients with Achilles tendinopathy, treatment with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medication (NSAIDs) for 1 week resulted in an improvement in VAS, while no significant changes in the VISA-A were detected [69]. In patients with temporomandibular joint osteoarthritis [70], the ingestion of a supplement containing glucosamine, chondroitin sulphate, and methylsulfonylmethane for 3 months led to a reduction in VAS but not to a significant change in mandibular mobility, suggesting that the supplementation was not able to trigger an adequate adaptive response to improve joint function. In adolescent swimmers with muscle damage induced by high-intensity interval swimming, supplementation with whey protein caused a significant decrease in pain score, while no beneficial effect on swimming performance was observed [71]. While a reduction in pain may be a necessary prerequisite to improve function, these studies suggest that pain relief is by no means automatically associated with an improvement in function or performance.

Although human and in vitro studies have shown that vitamin C has the potential of stimulating collagen synthesis [18] and Tendoactive® has the potential to inhibit the NF-κB-mediated IL-1ß catabolic signalling pathway in tendon cells [24], it appears that the acceleration of collagen synthesis is not necessarily reflected in scales measuring function.

In addition, it needs to be considered, that by reducing inflammation, the adaptive response could be impaired. Anti-inflammatory supplements have been found to suppress the production of prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) [72,73], and such changes can affect matrix remodelling and thus lead to impairments in tendon healing [74,75]. In healthy adults, one week of NSAID administration has been shown to cause a reduction in PGE2 and to minimize the adaptive increase in collagen synthesis in human patellar tendons induced by exercise [76]. Furthermore, not all patients suffering from tendinopathy present with signs of inflammation such as increased IL6 levels [14], and suppression of inflammation in those patients may not be warranted. This may explain why nutritional supplements aiming to reduce inflammation work poorly in patients with degenerative tendinopathy [23]. It may also explain why NSAID treatment, as a commonly applied approach to reduce musculoskeletal pain, does not necessarily lead to symptom improvement in tendinopathic patients. In a randomized controlled trial with 70 Achilles tendinopathy patients, a 28-day long treatment with the NSAID piroxicam did neither improve pain nor function compared to the placebo-treated group [77]. In this context, it needs to be highlighted that long-term oral NSAID intake may result in significant adverse effects, e.g., related to the gastrointestinal system [78]. The advantage of nutritional supplementation as an alternative to NSAID treatment may therefore be inherent in the lower risk to induce significant adverse side effects. However, when using additional nutritional supplementation as an intervention, it is noteworthy to pay attention to how functional parameters are affected by pain and how the reduction of inflammation may affect tendon metabolism.

5. Limitations

Overall, the number of studies included in this meta-analysis is small. As a result, subgroup analyses of some study characteristics were prevented, and no funnel plot could be graphed because the number of studies was small such that the test power was too low to distinguish chance from real asymmetry [46]. Second, included studies embraced a diverse range of dietary supplements with different ingredients and physiotherapy types and with a wide range of intervention durations (6 weeks to 6 months), which makes it difficult to draw any definitive conclusions on the use of combination treatment in tendinopathies. Third, potential factors such as funding from pharmaceutical companies and lack of random sequence generation might have affected the risk of bias.

The study by Balius et al. [23] was assessed to be at “high risk” of bias in five of seven evaluated areas, which may affect the final results. Since two studies [23,34] reported receiving funding from pharmaceutical companies, it cannot be excluded that the results of current research may be influenced by financial bias. In sensitivity analysis, the poor robustness of the pooled results in pain scores resulted from the methodology in the Notarnicola et al. [34] study, with only two of seven evaluated areas assessed as “low risk”, while the poor robustness of the pooled results in functional outcomes was caused by the sample size in the Sandford et al. [36] study, which was the highest within all included studies. The high heterogeneity of the Mavrogenis et al. [32] study stems from the diverse types of tendinopathies they explored within one study. Compared to exploring only one type of tendinopathy, including diverse types of tendinopathies, will affect the accuracy of the meta-analysis results.

6. Conclusions

In the management of tendinopathy, dietary supplementation in addition to physiotherapeutic treatment may be an effective strategy to reduce pain. However, more high-quality methodology RCTs with a sufficiently large sample size are required to confirm and establish a more definitive conclusion. With regard to the efficacy of dietary supplements combined with physiotherapy, studies have frequently used supplements which contain diverse components and which are supposed to fulfil multiple functions such as an improvement of collagen fibre organization [79] and downregulation of the level of oxidative stress and inflammation [24,27], limiting the evaluation of each single ingredient’s effect. Future studies should aim to limit the kinds of ingredients in dietary supplements for more targeted results.

Clinical implications of additional nutritional interventions in the management of tendinopathies are the potential to allow for a reduction of the use of painkillers and faster recovery.

Supplementary Materials

The following supporting information can be downloaded at: https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/jcm11061666/s1, Table S1: search strategy.

Author Contributions

K.L. and F.Q. had the idea for the study conception and design. F.Q., K.L. and J.L. selected the studies for inclusion and abstracted data. F.Q. performed the statistical analyses and wrote the first draft. K.L. critically revised the paper for important intellectual content. The corresponding author had full access to all the data in the study and had final responsibility for the decision to submit for publication. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

Fanji Qiu is supported by a grant from the China Scholarship Council (grant no. 202106520004).

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Footnotes

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

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