abstract
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BACKGROUND AND STUDY AIMS
Infiltration therapy (IT) for degenerative spine disease is
considered a valuable nonsurgical treatment option in the absence of
severe neurologic deficits. The aim of this study was to evaluate
the 10-day response to computed tomography (CT)-guided IT and to
identify parameters that are positively or negatively associated
with short-term outcome.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
We conducted a prospective study on 1327 consecutive patients that
received CT-guided IT for various spinal disorders between February
2007 and June 2013. Different steroids (betamethasone,
dexamethasone, triamcinolone) with or without bupivacaine were
applied using different approaches (direct and indirect for cervical
nerve roots; transforaminal and interlaminar as well as combined
approaches for lumbar nerve roots; facet joint and sacroiliac joint
infiltration). The primary end point was the patients' response 10
days after IT, which was graded as better, the same, or worse. The
chi-square test was used for subgroup comparisons.
RESULTS
A total of 1002 patients provided 10-day follow-up. Clinically
meaningful pain relief was achieved in 65 of 107 patients treated
for cervical disk herniation (60.8%), 27 of 60 for cervical
foraminal stenosis (45%), 295 of 412 for lumbar disk herniation
(71.6%), 134 of 199 for lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) (67.3%), 35 of
61 for cervical facet joint pain (57.4%), 87 of 128 for lumbar facet
joint pain (68%), and 25 of 35 for sacroiliac joint syndrome (SIJS)
(71.4%). There was no difference with regard to the infiltration
technique, types, and doses of steroids administered or the add-on
of local anesthetics. An age-dependent difference was shown for
elderly patients with LSS and SIJS. Repeated infiltrations were
equally effective in alleviating pain compared with the first
infiltration.
CONCLUSIONS
CT-guided IT for various spinal disorders has an overall positive
response rate of 66.7% after 10 days. Outcome was not unduly
influenced by technical variations in technique, types, and doses of
steroids administered and probably relates better to the correct
indication than to technical aspects.
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