Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ocoolant Spray vs Lidocaine Infiltration for Reducing the Pain of Spinal Needle Insertion During the Caudal Epidural Injection
This was a single-blind, randomized controlled trial. Sixty-six patients who underwent caudal epidural injection were randomized into the vapocoolant spray group or local infiltration group. Before the insertion of a 20-gauge spinal needle, the subcutaneous tissue was infiltrated with 3 ml of 2% lidocaine in the local infiltration group and vapocoolant spray was applied just before the spinal needle insertion in the spray group. 100-mm visual analog scale to evaluate the pain intensity of spinal needle insertion and a five-point Likert scale for patient satisfaction and preference for repeated use were compared between the two groups.
Interventions The intervention room was divided into two sections (intervention section and
waiting section) using a blinded partition, for prompt coming and going by the
investigators. Before the CEI, patient was informed about how to use a VAS and a five-point
Likert scale. Then, patient anxiety about CEI was measured using the Likert scale with the
following statement: "I am anxious about undergoing a CEI". After that, the patient was
positioned on the table in a prone posture, and the interventionist, who was blinded to the
other study procedures, palpated the sacral hiatus and marked with an indelible pen. Then he
went behind the partition.
Thereafter, the principal investigator entered the intervention section, opened and checked
the sealed envelope. And he prepared the sacrococcygeal area using an iodine-based povidone
and an alcohol swabs. As a topical pre-CEI anesthesia, the marked site was infiltrated
subcutaneously with 3 ml of 2% lidocaine in the local infiltration group. In the spray
group, the marked site was sprayed using an vapocoolant spray (Walter Ritter GmbH and Co.,
Hamburg, Germany) for 10-sec from a distance of 30 cm. To enhance a blind design, 10-sec
spray was performed with targeting to the open air after 3 min (time for manifesting the
effect of lidocaine) in the local infiltration group. In the spray group, there had been
same time interval of 3 min before spraying.
Immediately after these procedures, the marked site was prepped again using alcohol swab,
then the principal investigator left and the interventionist entered the intervention
section. And the interventionist inserted a prepared 20-gauge spinal needle into the marked
site and pointed the needle toward the sacral hiatus under ultrasonography (Xario, Toshiba,
Otawara, Japan) guided. When neither tissue resistance nor subcutaneous injection was
noticed after injecting saline, 15 ml of 0.5% lidocaine and 10 mg of dexamethasone were
injected.
After finishing the CEI, each patient was asked to fill out the self-administered documents
for outcome measures, seal them in an envelope, and submit them to the principal
investigator.
Outcome Measures Pain induced by spinal needle insertion was assessed using a 100-mm VAS as
well as patients' satisfaction about the topical pre-CEI anesthesia using a five-point
Likert scale. The 100-mm VAS consisted of a 100-mm horizontal line labeled "no pain" at the
left and "worst pain imaginable" at the right. The five-point Likert scale (1, strongly
agree; 2, agree; 3, undecided; 4, disagree; and 5, strongly disagree) was used to answer two
questions: ''Are you satisfied with the topical pre-CEI anesthesia used before the spinal
needle insertion of CEI?'' and ''Will you use the topical pre-CEI anesthesia applied today
again if CEI repeated in the future?''
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