Spinal pain: Interventional treatment and evidence
Transcription
Spinal pain: Interventional treatment and evidence
Interventional treatment chronic pain ZOL 24/3/16 Koen Van Boxem, MD, PhD, FIPP Sint-Jozefkliniek, Bornem en Willebroek Content I. II. • • Interventions Spinal pain Lumbosacral radicular pain Lumbar facet pain III. Non- Spinal pain • Trigeminal neuralgia • Cervicogenic headache • Occipital neuralgia Content I. II. • • Interventions Spinal pain Lumbosacral radicular pain Lumbar facet pain III. Non- Spinal pain • Trigeminal neuralgia • Cervicogenic headache • Occipital neuralgia Outline • When ? – conventional treatment failed – pharmacologic untolerable side effects – balance possible benefits against potential complications Outline • When ? – conventional treatment failed – pharmacologic untolerable side effects – balance possible benefits against potential complications • Interventional options ? 1. 2. 3. Injection therapy (Pulsed) radiofrequency treatment Neurostimulation 1. Injection therapy Targets nerve(s) involved in pain condition – local anesthetic » immediate pain reduction » potential anti-inflammatory action – corticosteroid » anti-inflammatory action – biological agents e.g. botulism toxin, anti-NGF, anti-TNF » Value ? 2. Radiofrequency treatment • High frequency electrical current adjacent to a nerve – change in structure changed pain conduction Chronic radicular pain - PRF After positive diagnostic block : Pulsed RadioFrequency (PRF) treatment adjacent to DRG: Burst of RF No RF Geurts, Lancet 2003 Van Boxem et al. In press • High frequency electrical current adjacent to a nerve – change in structure changed pain conduction Continuous radiofrequency Pulsed radiofrequency Pulsed radiofrequency treatment • High frequency electrical current adjacent to a nerve – change in structure changed pain conduction Continuous radiofrequency Pulsed radiofrequency Continuous administration of high frequency electrical current Production of heat Nerve damage Sluijter et al. The Pain Clinic 1998; 11 (2): 109-117 Pulsed radiofrequency treatment • High frequency electrical current adjacent to a nerve – change in structure changed pain conduction Continuous radiofrequency Continuous administration of high frequency electrical current Production of heat Nerve damage Pulsed radiofrequency Short electrical pulses with higher voltage followed by a silent period: heat is washed out Less nerve damage Sluijter et al. The Pain Clinic 1998; 11 (2): 109-117 3. Neurostimulation Mechanism SCS for Neuropathic Pain From Smits H. et al (2012) Summary SCS NeuP RVM & LC Linderoth & Meyerson, Anesthesiology 2010 Content I. Interventions II. Spinal pain • pathofysiology Ontstaan rugpijn Wervel : • • Geniaal qua architectuur 200 miljoen jaar evolutie tot mens Maar … we zijn rechtop gaan lopen : • • Evolutie : grote stap voorwaarts Maar voor rug … een vergissing Facetgewrichten Tussenwervelschijf 2.Verschuiving wervel facetarthrose 1.Discus smaller 3.Vernauwing uitgang zenuwwortel Content I. Interventions II. Spinal pain • Lumbosacral radicular pain • Radiculaire pijn: – Ontstekingsreactie zenuwwortel (hernia) – Lage rug : Lumbo-sacraal – Uitstralingspijn bv. L5 of S1 • Radiculaire pijn: – Ontstekingsreactie zenuwwortel (hernia) – Lage rug : Lumbo-sacraal – Uitstralingspijn bv. L5 of S1 • Frequent: 1/20 van de mensen ouder dan 30 jaar → Meest voorkomende vorm van zenuwpijn • Lage levenskwaliteit Doth 2010, Bala 2011 • Spontaan verloop : 75 % herstel 3 maanden maar … – resterende 25 % : ongunstig, vrouwen – Hoge hervalkans – 2 jaren, 2e lijns : • 40 % niet succesvol • ¼ werkonbekwaam • Conservatieve behandelingen : juiste waarde ? Balague 1999, Vroomen 2002, Pinto 2012 Dworkin 2007 Suri 2012, Haugen 2012, Grovle 2013 • Hernia : Hernia Cellichamen zenuwen in ganglion spinale Van Boxem RAPM 2014 Van Boxem RAPM 2014 Interventional pain management I. (Sub)acute radicular pain: epidural corticosteroids II. Chronic radicular pain: – – pulsed radiofrequency treatment Neurostimulation Interventional pain management I. (Sub)acute radicular pain: epidural corticosteroids Subacute • Epidural corticosteroids : close to the inflammation • Interlaminar • Transforaminal AVU sept 2009 Evidence All epidural approaches : • 23 RCT : high quality (GRADE) - short term: + over placebo leg pain, disability - long term: - Pinto Ann. Int. Medic. 2012 Interventional pain management I. (Sub)acute radicular pain: epidural corticosteroids II. Chronic radicular pain: – – pulsed radiofrequency treatment Neurostimulation 5HT en NA PRF biological effects ↗ C-Fos ↗ Met-enkephalinen ↘ OX-42 (microglia) ↘ glutamate – aspartate Spinale ganglion : Δ myeline, mitochondrien, microfilamenten, microtubuli ↗ ATF-3 Van Boxem Van VanZundert Boxem RAPM 2014 Chronic radicular pain - radiofrequency • Pulsed RadioFrequency (PRF) treatment adjacent to DRG: – PRF improves pain in patients with chronic lumbosacral radicular pain Van Boxem Pain Medicine 2014 Interventional pain management I. (Sub)acute radicular pain: epidural corticosteroids II. Chronic radicular pain: – – pulsed radiofrequency treatment Spinal Cord Stimulation Spinal cord stimulation: evidence • Pts with FBSS: SCS vs reoperation – SCS more effective, less cross over to surgery • Pts with FBSS: SCS vs CMM – Less cross over in SCS group to CMM, more pts satisfied. North et al. Neurosurgery 2005 Kumar et al. Pain 2007 Conclusion radicular pain • Interventions : • subacute radicular pain: epidural steroids efficient but short-term • Chronic radicular pain: pulsed radiofrequency treatment Spinal cord stimulation: FBSS Content I. II. • • Interventions Spinal pain Lumbosacral radicular pain Lumbar facet pain Facet pain • Innervation : medial branch Goldthwaite J.Boston Med Surg J. 1911 Ghormley R. JAMA. 1933 Cohen SP, Anesthesiology. 2007 Diagnosis • History: axial low back pain potentially with referral pattern • Clinical examination: lumbar paravertebral tenderness • Diagnostic Medial Branch Block Van Kleef et al. Pain Practice 2010 Treatment facetpain • Radiofrequency of medial branch for lumbar facet joint pain Content I. II. • • Interventions Spinal pain Lumbosacral radicular pain Lumbar facet pain III. Non- Spinal pain • Trigeminal neuralgia • Cervicogenic headache • Occipital neuralgia Indications interventional pain therapy I. Head and face – Trigeminal neuralgia – Cervicogenic headache – Occipital neuralgia Trigeminal neuralgia Trigeminal neuralgia • • • • Description : recurrent unilateral brief electric shock-like pains abrupt in onset and termination limited to the distribution of one or more divisions of the trigeminal nerve triggered by innocuous stimuli. International Headache Society, Cephalalgia 2013 Pathofysiology Classical : Neurovasculair compression : superior cerebellar artery Painful trigeminal neuropathy neural damage (post)herpetic MS (7%) space-occupying lesion IHS, Cephalalgia 2013 Imaging • MRI – For exclusion of the symptomatic variant – Support for the decision of surgical decompression – 30% has also compression of the asymptomatic side. Trigeminal neuralgia Trigeminal neuralgia : Gasserian ganglion ganglion pterygopalatinum Gasserian ganglion RCT’s on Trigeminal neuralgia • Comparison of pulsed radiofrequency with conventional radiofrequency in the treatment of idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia. → RF > PRF Erdine, S., et al. Eur J Pain 2007 Overview I. Head and face – Trigeminal neuralgia – Cervicogenic headache Anamnesis • Pain begins in the neck radiates outward to frontotemporal and possibly to the supra-orbital area. • Nagging and nonpulsating • Occurs in attacks of unpredictable duration (hours to days) • Pattern of attacks can change into a chronic fluctuating headache. Physical examination Interventional treatment • Local injections : – occipital nerve – intra-articular facet • Radiofrequency treatment – Facet : ramus medialis (medial branch) dorsal ramus of the segmental nerve – DRG : ganglion spinale RF Medial branch of dorsal ramus • RCTs – RF facet vs sham no difference 3, 12 and 24 months (no examination of facet joints!) – RF facet ± RF DRG C2-C3 vs injection of n. occipitalis ± TENS • At 1 year FU significant pain reduction in 53% RF patients and in 46% of injection/TENS patients Hildebrandt. Man Med 1986; 2: 48-52 Van Suijlenkom et al. Funct. Neurol. 1998; 13 : 297- 303 Stovner et al. Cephalgia 2004; 24: 821-830 Haspeslagh et al. BMC Anesthesiol. 2006; 16: 1 Overview I. Head and face – Trigeminal neuralgia – Cervicogenic headache – Occipital neuralgia Local injections Steroid or PRF Occipital nerve ? • RCT LA/saline + PRF vs LA/steroid + sham PRF • N= 81 • Outcome : PRF > steroid – Average occipital pain : 6weeks- 6 months – Worst occipital pain : 3 months – Average overall headache : 6 weeks Cohen Pain 2015 Stimulation n. occipitalis • Systematic review : 9 studies (level III) Stimulation is a treatment option after failure approach conservative Sweet Neurosurg 2015