Purpose: To demonstrate the technical efficacy and safety of CT-guided transforaminal periradicular infiltration in the treatment of the radicular pain without surgical intervention, using CT foot switches and MPR images. Materials and methods: Four hundred and eighty two patients (286 males and 196 females, age range 27-71 years, mean age 56 years) with a unilateral or bilateral radiculopathy who underwent CT-guided transforaminal periradicular infiltration without surgical intervention, were retrospectively selected in the period from January 2019 to February 2020. Patients who had received surgery for herniated disc or laminectomy, patients with a previous vertebral fractures, and patients with inflammatory syndrome or risk of bleeding were excluded. Results: There were no major or minor clinically relevant complications. Many patients a marked reduction or resolution of pain after the CT-guided infiltration (P<0.05). No patient required hospitalization. One patient reported an episode of intense headache, which resolved after twenty minutes. In eleven cases, a slight increase in pain related to spinal compression caused by the administration of the drug was reported, even if administrated extremely slowly. Sixteen patients reported pain in the upper limbs during and after the procedure, however this was not related to infiltration but to the forced and prolonged arm position. Conclusion: CT-guided transforaminal periradicular infiltration is a semi-invasive and well tolerated procedure, moreover it has a reduced comorbidity and no observed major or minor complications. The CT foot switches and MPR evaluation may help to make the procedure more efficient.
Technical efficacy and safety of CT-guided transforaminal periradicular infiltration using CT foot switches and MPR images / Saba, Luca; Saba, Francesco; Dagan, Robert; De Filippo, Massimo; Marcy, Pierre Yves. - In: ACTA BIOMEDICA. - ISSN 2531-6745. - 92:6(2022), p. e2021315. [10.23750/abm.v92i6.10588]
Technical efficacy and safety of CT-guided transforaminal periradicular infiltration using CT foot switches and MPR images
Saba, Luca;De Filippo, Massimo;
2022-01-01
Abstract
Purpose: To demonstrate the technical efficacy and safety of CT-guided transforaminal periradicular infiltration in the treatment of the radicular pain without surgical intervention, using CT foot switches and MPR images. Materials and methods: Four hundred and eighty two patients (286 males and 196 females, age range 27-71 years, mean age 56 years) with a unilateral or bilateral radiculopathy who underwent CT-guided transforaminal periradicular infiltration without surgical intervention, were retrospectively selected in the period from January 2019 to February 2020. Patients who had received surgery for herniated disc or laminectomy, patients with a previous vertebral fractures, and patients with inflammatory syndrome or risk of bleeding were excluded. Results: There were no major or minor clinically relevant complications. Many patients a marked reduction or resolution of pain after the CT-guided infiltration (P<0.05). No patient required hospitalization. One patient reported an episode of intense headache, which resolved after twenty minutes. In eleven cases, a slight increase in pain related to spinal compression caused by the administration of the drug was reported, even if administrated extremely slowly. Sixteen patients reported pain in the upper limbs during and after the procedure, however this was not related to infiltration but to the forced and prolonged arm position. Conclusion: CT-guided transforaminal periradicular infiltration is a semi-invasive and well tolerated procedure, moreover it has a reduced comorbidity and no observed major or minor complications. The CT foot switches and MPR evaluation may help to make the procedure more efficient.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.