Mountain State Medical Policy Bulletin |
Section: | Surgery |
Number: | S-193 |
Topic: | Prolotherapy |
Effective Date: | October 29, 2007 |
Issued Date: | October 29, 2007 |
Date Last Reviewed: | 10/2007 |
Indications and Limitations of Coverage
Prolotherapy is considered investigational as a treatment of musculoskeletal pain and, therefore, is not covered. Scientific evidence does not demonstrate the efficacy of the service. A participating, preferred, or network provider can bill the member for the denied service. Description Prolotherapy describes a procedure for strengthening lax ligaments by injecting proliferating agents/sclerosing solutions directly into torn or stretched ligaments or into a joint or adjacent structures to create scar tissue in an effort to stabilize a joint. Agents used with prolotherapy have included zinc sulfate, psyllium seed oil, combinations of dextrose, glycerine, and phenol, or dextrose alone. "Proliferatives" act to promote tissue repair or growth by prompting release of growth factors, such as cytokines, or increasing the effectiveness of existing circulating growth factors. Prolotherapy may involve a single injection or a series of injections, often diluted with a local anesthetic. |
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M0076 |
This medical policy may not apply to FEP. Medical policy is not an authorization, certification, explanation of benefits, or a contract. Benefits are determined by the Federal Employee Program. |
Intraligamentous Injection of Sclerosing Solutions (Prolotherapy) for Spinal Pain: A Critical Review of the Literature, Spine, Vol. 5, Issue 3, May-June 2005 Side Effects and Adverse Events Related to Intraligamentous Injection of Sclerosing Solutions (Prolotherapy) for Back and Neck Pain: A Survey of Practitioners, Arch Phys Med Rehabil, Vol. 87, Issue 7, July 2006 Prolotherapy Injections for Chronic Low-Back Pain, Cochrane Database Syst Rev, Vol. 18, Issue 2, April 2007 A Systematic Review of Prolotherapy for Chronic Musculoskeletal Pain, Clinical Journal of Sports Medicine, Vol. 15, Issue 5, September 2005 Defining Worthwhile and Desired Responses to Treatment of Chronic Low Back Pain, Pain Medicine, Vol. 7, Issue 1, January-February 2006 |