Loading…

Results from an expedited spinal nerve root block clinic at a UK tertiary neurosurgical centre

Retrospective Observational Study. Lumbar radicular pain has a prevalence of 3–5%. Level 1 evidence has demonstrated equivalence between surgical and injection treatment. We assess the outcomes from a transforaminal epidural steroid injection clinic in a tertiary neuroscience referral centre. We per...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:The surgeon (Edinburgh) 2024-02, Vol.22 (1), p.e41-e47
Main Authors: Feeley, Iain, Shahin, Ahmed, Feeley, Aoife, Wilby, Martin, Goebel, Andreas, Bhojak, Maneesh, Gupta, Manish, Gulati, Sumit
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Retrospective Observational Study. Lumbar radicular pain has a prevalence of 3–5%. Level 1 evidence has demonstrated equivalence between surgical and injection treatment. We assess the outcomes from a transforaminal epidural steroid injection clinic in a tertiary neuroscience referral centre. We performed an analysis of data from consecutive patients entered into a new internal referral database between August 2018 to May 2021. Radicular pain was classified as one of “first presentation” or “recurrence”. Outcomes were obtained from follow up clinic letters and recorded in a binary manner of “positive result” or “negative result”. Spinal pathology was documented from radiology reports and MRI images. We analysed 208 patients referred to the clinic. Excluding those who improved to a point of not requiring treatment, and those who underwent surgical intervention, 119 patients undergoing injection were included, of which 14 were lost to follow-up. 68 % of patients had a positive result from injection. Subgroup analysis demonstrated good outcomes for both hyperacute (12 months). Contained disk pathologies had better outcomes than uncontained. There was no difference in outcomes across grades of compression, but previous same level surgery was associated with poorer response rates. There is a high rate of natural resolution of symptoms in patients with LSRP. In those where pain persists, TFESI is a valuable first line treatment modality. This study suggests the efficacy of TFESI is potentially independent of grade of stenosis and chronicity of symptoms. Contained disc pathologies respond better than uncontained. •Injection therapy is a cost effective modality in managing lumbosacral radicular pain.•68 % of patients reported a positive outcome.•Those with a contained disc pathology where more likely to have better outcomes.•There was no correlation between severity of stenosis and outcome from injection.
ISSN:1479-666X
2405-5840
DOI:10.1016/j.surge.2023.10.004