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Clinical Trial Summary

Low back pain is a symptom that is frequently seen in the general population and reduces the quality of life of patients. Conventional medical treatment for patients with low back pain includes oral medication, lifestyle modification, education, exercises, lumbar traction and manual manipulation, heat application, and other interventional procedures. Epidural injections, one of the interventional procedures, are one of the common treatment methods for low back pain, especially caused by disc prolapse. Steroids are commonly used to reduce inflammation in the epidural space. Epidural steroid injection can be given to the lumbar epidural space via transforaminal, interlaminar and caudal routes, and the effectiveness rate of each is different. These interventional methods used to treat low back pain can be applied in combination. The main purpose of this study is to observe how adding lumbar sympathetic blockade will affect the patient's pain in the postoperative period in patients to whom we applied caudal epidural and transforaminal steroid injection.


Clinical Trial Description

Low back pain is a symptom that is frequently seen in the general population and reduces the quality of life of patients. Conventional medical treatment for patients with low back pain includes oral medication, lifestyle modification, education, exercises, lumbar traction and manual manipulation, heat application, and other interventional procedures [1, 2]. Epidural injections, one of the interventional procedures, are one of the common treatment methods for low back pain, especially caused by disc prolapse. Steroids are widely used to reduce inflammation in the epidural space [3, 4]. Epidural steroid injection can be administered to the lumbar epidural space via transforaminal, interlaminar and caudal routes, and each has different efficacy rates [5-7]. Sympathetically maintained pain, including lumbar sympathetic ganglion block (LSGB), complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) types I and II, neuropathies (such as postherpetic neuralgia, stump or phantom limb pain), diabetic polyneuropathy, and ischemic pain from vascular insufficiency in the lower leg It is a widely applied procedure for diagnosing and managing diseases [8]. The autonomic nervous system consists of sympathetic and parasympathetic departments. As the name suggests, blood supply to the lower extremity increases after lumbar sympathetic block. This is useful in sympathetic system-mediated treatment of pain [9]. The most important reason for adding fentanyl and magnesium as adjvams is to improve the quality of analgesia and provide analgesia for a longer period of time. Both fentanyl and magnesium have the ability to modulate neurotransmitter release and affect neuronal excitability. Fentanyl demonstrates the role of the sympathetic nervous system in modulating pain by increasing the effectiveness of endogenous opioids in the sympathetic ganglia and central nervous system. Magnesium competes with calcium; It reduces the release of neurotransmitters such as acetylcholine. Magnesium's ability to inhibit the release of acetylcholine contributes to its anticonvulsant properties. Additionally, blocking NMDA receptors contributes to its analgesic effects. Additionally, magnesium's ability to enhance the effects of local anesthetics has been studied. By increasing the firing threshold in nerves and causing hyperpolarization, magnesium enhances the effect of local anesthetics, thereby improving nerve blockade. This enhancement of nerve blockade is particularly evident when magnesium is added to agents such as bupivacaine [10, 11]. These interventional methods used to treat low back pain can be applied in combination. There is not enough research on this subject. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06438952
Study type Interventional
Source Bezmialem Vakif University
Contact Zübeyde Özdemir
Phone +90 2125232288
Email etikkurul@bezmialem.edu.tr
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date June 2024
Completion date December 2024

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