A Trial of Cooled Radiofrequency Ablation of Medial Branch Nerves for theTreatment of Lumbar Facet Syndrome
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Back Pain |
Therapuetic Areas: | Musculoskeletal |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 18 - 79 |
Updated: | 9/8/2018 |
Start Date: | June 2015 |
End Date: | August 2018 |
A Prospective Trial of Cooled Radiofrequency Ablation of Medial Branch Nerves for the Treatment of Lumbar Facet Syndrome
This study is being done to determine whether cooled radiofrequency ablation (CRFA) on the
medial branch nerves of the lumbar facet joint is effective for the treatment of low back
pain. CRFA blocks the nerves that carry pain signals from joints in the lower back such that
the brain does not receive the message that the low back is in pain. This technique is
commonly performed by burning these nerves rather freezing them, but it is suspected that
freezing them results in better pain relief. The CRFA blocks has been shown to effectively
treat sacroiliac joint pain (a joint in the pelvis), which is another reason that it is
suspected that CRFA will be effective when treating pain related to facet joints in the low
back. We are performing this study in order to determine if that is the case.
medial branch nerves of the lumbar facet joint is effective for the treatment of low back
pain. CRFA blocks the nerves that carry pain signals from joints in the lower back such that
the brain does not receive the message that the low back is in pain. This technique is
commonly performed by burning these nerves rather freezing them, but it is suspected that
freezing them results in better pain relief. The CRFA blocks has been shown to effectively
treat sacroiliac joint pain (a joint in the pelvis), which is another reason that it is
suspected that CRFA will be effective when treating pain related to facet joints in the low
back. We are performing this study in order to determine if that is the case.
The CRFA blocks has been shown to effectively treat sacroiliac joint pain (a joint in the
pelvis), which is another reason that it is suspected that CRFA will be effective when
treating pain related to facet joints in the low back. We are performing this study in order
to determine if that is the case.
pelvis), which is another reason that it is suspected that CRFA will be effective when
treating pain related to facet joints in the low back. We are performing this study in order
to determine if that is the case.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patients with lumbar facet syndrome pain who would undergo treatment by lumbar medial
branch radiofrequency ablation.
- Low back pain for at least 6 months.
- Pain resistant to conventional therapy including NSAIDs, opioids, muscle relaxants,
oral steroids, physical therapy or chiropractic care.
- Pain diagram suggesting possibility of facet-mediated pain.
- Referred pain when present not beyond the knee.
- Positive response to at least 1 set of diagnostic intra-articular facet injections or
medial branch blocks, defined as > 75% reduction in pain following diagnostic blocks
with local anesthetic (0.5mL of 0.5% bupivacaine OR 0.5 mL of 2% lidocaine).
Exclusion Criteria:
- Focal neurologic signs or symptoms.
- Radiologic evidence of a symptomatic herniated disc or nerve root impingement related
to spinal stenosis.
- Previous radiofrequency ablation treatment for similar symptoms.
- Patient refusal.
- Lack of consent.
- Active systemic or local infections at the site of proposed needle and electrode
placement.
- Coagulopathy or other bleeding disorder, current use of anticoagulants or
anti-platelet medications.
- Allergy to medications being used for injection procedures (contrast dye, local
anesthetic, IV sedative).
- Inability to read English, communicate with staff, or participate in follow up.
- Pregnancy.
- Cognitive deficit.
- Negative response to diagnostic intra-articular facet injections or medial branch
blocks, defined as < 75% reduction in pain following diagnostic blocks with local
anesthetic (0.5mL of 0.5% bupivacaine OR 0.5 mL of 2% lidocaine).
- Daily opiate analgesic use more exceeding 3 months prior to study inclusion.
- Unstable medical or psychiatric illness.
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