Yes the treatment for Ankle Sprains work. That is not the issue. The issue is whether there are better treatments available.
Better how? Wound healing is wound healing. Skin, tendons, ligaments, and bone all heal in a specific fashion. Yes compression changes secondary to primary bone healed in certain types of fractures, has been proven scientifically and therefore is utilized. But to change say the treatment of plantar fasciitis with newer expensive procedures when it it is cured quickly, safely, and relatively inexpensively 95% of the time is purely fiscally driven. Better would mean to me higher efficacy, less complications, faster return to activity, and yes if possible cheaper (when has a cheaper technology come forward?).
I've been trying for close to ten years to have an study initiated to substantiate the effectiveness of the Thermocapsular shrinkage technique. It has been proven to work in the shoulder in multiple studies that were actually well conceived and well executed. After an attempt to reproduce the results in the knee, it was found that in the ACL and PCL injuries, the results were horrendous. I'm sure there is plenty of data to suggest that it should be done more in the ankle, but no solid studies have been done. The ONE study that showed good results had a whopping 10 patient population. Not enough to convince people.
That being said, when I ask at conferences why this procedure isn't done more, most confess that they just aren't proficient enough at Arthroscopy to offer this treatment modality to their patients.
Todays DPMs routinely use arthroscopy in their practices. Arthroscopic ankle arthrodesis, endoscopic gastroc recession, plantar fascial releases, subtalar arthroscopy, and even tenoscopy are being lectured about, studied, and being performed. So I do not believe that is the reason capsular shrinkage is not being performed. Studies supporting it (with more patients than 10) that have good science will drive increase use of this technique.
I am not saying it will not be a proven technique in 10 years but as of today and over a I believe 15 years it has not proved out or being utilized. Perhaps you will be the tipping point study in 5 years. That would be cool.
THAT'S the problem. So its not that the new technology doesn't work in some specific situations, but the proficiency isn't there. How to address that?
My Shrinkage patients are back in a sneaker and active in two weeks (with a brace on) and few of them ever need PT and in the last 8 years, I've had 2 patients re injure. The biggest complication I've had with the procedure is transient neuritis from the Arthroscope. I did a ton of classic ATFL repairs in residency and the results across the board were somewhat good, but nothing like they have been with this procedure. The better mouse trap? I think so.