Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Efficacy Of Magnesium In Radicular Lower Limb Pain When It Is Added To Local Anesthetics And Steroids In The Transforaminal Epidural Injections. A Comparative Study
investigators want to assess the efficacy of magnesium in radicular lower limb pain when it is added to local anesthetics and steroids in the transforaminal epidural injections.
INTRODUCTION:
One of the common presentation of low back pain and lower extremities pain is lumbar
radicular pain which may be caused by a herniated intervertebral disc exerting a pressure on
nerve roots, resulting in pain, functional disability, opioid use for pain relief and
consuming health resources (1,2). Radicular pain has a typical shocking, lancinating, or
electric character traveling into the lower limb along a narrow band. In approximately 90% of
cases, radiculopathy is mainly due to a prolapsed disc causing nerve root impingement (3).
Different modalities of treatments are used in managing chronic low back pain and
radiculopathy. Most of the patients will respond well to conservative management. But after
the failure of this conservative treatment, either surgical or nonsurgical modalities such as
epidural injections are going to be considered in the treatment of lumbar radiculopathy (4).
Transforaminal epidural injection (TFEI) is a known approach for treatment of spinal nerve
root pathology. A transforaminal epidural directs medications at the nerve root as it leaves
the spinal cord at the ventrolateral aspect of the epidural space whereas a conventional
(interlaminar) epidural results in a small amount of medication over a wide area at the
posterior epidural space (5). A transforaminal epidural gives us the opportunity to allocate
the medications where they are required (6). Transforaminal epidural injections under
fluoroscopic guidance have emerged as the preferred approach to the epidural space (7). Many
drugs have been proven to be effective in managing low back pain when they are injected in
the epidural space by transforaminal approach such as local anesthetics, steroids and
adjuvants (7). Magnesium is a physiological blocker of the NMDA receptors (8) because it
blocks NMDA channels in a voltage-dependent manner, and such NMDA antagonist effect can
inhibit the induction of central sensitization from peripheral nociceptive stimulation
(9,10). Magnesium may suppress neuropathic pain (11), enhance morphine analgesia, attenuate
morphine tolerance (12), and improve fentanyl analgesia when magnesium is given intrathecally
(13). Magnesium deficiency produces hyperalgesia (14) and has been related to cause some
acute medical and surgical conditions in which pain or stress is present (15). Magnesium is
proved to be injected safely within the nervous tissue in animals (16) and in 2002 Asokumar
and his colleagues proved that magnesium is safely injected Intrathecal in human (17).
Because of the results of a previous study that indicates that intrathecal administration of
sulfate sault in magnesium has a risk of neurotoxicity (18), investigators preferred to use
preservative free magnesium in our study. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy
of magnesium sulphate as an anti-neuropathic drug in relieving unilateral lower limb
radicular pain due to disc prolapse when it was injected with lidocaine and steroids in the
anterior epidural space using the transforaminal epidural approach. Our primary outcome was
to assess the improvement of pain score post-injection, while, the secondary outcome was to
evaluate the improvement of the functional ability and the satisfaction level of the patients
after the procedure.
Patients and Methods:
Firstly, The study IS approved by the local ethics committee (Fayoum Faculty of Medicine
Research Ethics Committee R139 ). This prospective, controlled, randomized, double-blinded
study is going to be carried out in the pain management department of Fayoum University
Hospital. Written consents are going to be taken from all patients. The randomization is
going to be performed via sealed opaque envelopes. All procedures are going to be performed
by one investigator who is blind to the injected drugs used in this study. Inclusion criteria
are patients of both gender, aged from 20 up to 70 years old, American Society of
Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status grade I and II (19), admitted for pain management of
their unilateral lower limb radicular pain due to lumbo-sacral disc prolapse confirmed by
lumbo-sacral magnetic resonance imaging ( MRI) after failure of conservative treatments in
the form of drug therapy and physiotherapy to control the pain for 6 weeks. Exclusion
criteria are patients with axial back pain without leg radiation, patients with motor
neurological deficits, previous spine surgeries, allergy to the study drugs used,
uncontrolled diabetes mellitus or hypertension, local or systemic infection, pregnancy, and
patients with any other neurological deficits as cauda equina. This study is going to be
conducted on 100 patients. Patients are going to be divided according to the injected drugs
into two equal groups (50 patients each):
1. Group (C): where all patients will receive through the transforaminal epidural approach
2 ml of bupivacaine (0.5%), 1ml of methylprednisolone (40 mg) and 1 ml of normal saline
(0.9 %) with a total volume of 4 ml.
2. Group (M): where all patients will receive through the transforaminal epidural approach
2 ml of bupivacaine (0.5%), 1ml of methylprednisolone (40 mg) and 1 ml of preservative
free magnesium (200 mg) with a total volume of 4 ml. Methylprednisolone which is used in
this study is going to be supplied from E.I.P.I.C.O pharmaceuticals -Egypt under license
of UPJOHN s.a Puurs-Belgium (Depo-Medrol). Preservative free magnesium which is used in
the study is prepared in McGuff Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Laboratories and supplied in 50 ml
vials containing magnesium (200 mg/ml).
All patients are going to be evaluated pre-operatively by medical history, clinical
examination, and lumbosacral spine MRI. The severity of pain is going to be assessed using
the visual analog scale (VAS) where 0 and 10 were marked on a 10cm linear scale (0- 4 mm = no
pain, 5-44 mm = mild pain, 45- 74 = moderate pain, 75-100 = severe pain) (20). Patients are
going to be evaluated for effective pain relief (defined as ≥50% reduction of pain perception
post-intervention by VAS. Functional assessment is done using Modified Oswestry Disability
Questionnaire (MODQ), which is formed of a10 item scale with six response categories each.
Each item scores from 0 to 5, higher scores being worse, which is transformed into a 0-100
scale. The ten items include pain intensity, personal care, lifting, walking, sitting,
standing, sleeping, work, social life and traveling. Patients with scores between 0 to 20
have Minimal Disability, between 21 and 40 have Moderate Disability, between 41-60 have
Severe Disability, 61 to 80 are crippled and 81 to 100 are bed-bound or exaggerating their
symptoms, this questionnaire has been designed to give us information about how back or leg
pain is affecting the ability to manage in everyday life (21). VAS and MODQ are going to be
assessed immediately pre-intervention and at 1 day, 1 week, 1 month, and 3 months
post-intervention.
The demographic data for all patients as regards to age, gender, weight, and height are going
to be recorded and compared between the studied groups. Also, the pre-intervention clinical
examination data of all patients as regards to the level, the site of disc prolapse, and the
side of radiculopathy are going to be recorded and compared between the groups. The
occurrence of side effects is going to be recorded and compared between both groups
post-intervention.
The level of the intervention (affected nerve root) and the right versus the left sides of
radiating pain are going to be determined by both clinical examination and radiological
findings. Pre-intervention, an intravenous (IV) cannula is going to be inserted with
initiation of normal saline (0.9%) at a rate of 10 ml/kg to prevent hypotension. Emergency
drugs as atropine and ephedrine are going to be prepared. All patients are going to be
monitored throughout the procedure by electrocardiogram (ECG), noninvasive blood pressure,
and pulse oximetry throughout the procedure and during the post-interventional time for 2
hours. Patients are going to be placed in a prone position with a pillow under their abdomen
(between the iliac crests) to decrease the lumbar lordosis. Mild sedation is going to be
given with 0.02 mg/kg of midazolam intravenously. TFEIs are going to be done under full
sterile technique using fluoroscopic guidance. After fluoroscopic detection of the desired
intervertebral level, the entry site is identified, and the skin is anesthetized with local
infiltration of 3 ml of lidocaine 1%. TFEI approach is performed under biplane fluoroscopic
guidance. While a patient lying in the prone position, the tube is rotated obliquely
approximately 10-30° toward the affected side to ensure injection at the neural foramen. The
goal of positioning is to allow a perpendicular needle tract toward the classic injection
site below the pedicle (22).
Sample size calculation:
The required sample size has been calculated using the G*Power version 3.1.9 Software (Faul
et al., 2007) (23). The primary outcome measure is the proportion of patients achieving
satisfactory response at 12 weeks after the procedure. Satisfactory response is defined as
reduction of the pain score by 50% or more from the pre-procedure value. Since no previous
study has compared the effect of adding magnesium sulfate or steroid to local anesthetic for
transforaminal block in patients with chronic LBP, investigators considered that a medium
effect size corresponding to a Cohen's ω of 0.3 would be clinically relevant. So,
investigators calculated that a sample size of 44 patients in either study group would
achieve a power of 80% to detect statistical significance for an effect size equivalent to
Cohen's ω of 0.3 regarding the proportion of patients achieving satisfactory response at 12
week after the procedure using a two-sided chi-squared test with an alpha error of 0.05.
Considering a drop-out rate of around 10%, 50 patients will be recruited in either group.
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