Articles: low-back-pain.
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We describe a case report and technique for using a portable ultrasound scanner and a curvilinear transducer (4-5MHz) (SonoSite Micromaxx SonoSite, Inc. 21919 30th Drive SE Bothwell W. A.) to guide sacroiliac joint (SIJ) injection. A 42-year-old male presented with chronic lower back pain centered on his left SIJ. ⋯ Ultrasound guidance does not expose patients and personnel to radiation and is readily accessible. Ultrasound-guided SIJ injections may have particular applications in the management of chronic lower back pain in certain clinical scenarios (e.g. pregnancy). Future studies to demonstrate efficacy and reproducibility are needed.
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Consecutive case series. ⋯ The new technique may offer a safe and effective treatment for intractable SIJ pain.
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Comparative Study
Exposure to movement in chronic back pain: evidence of successful generalization across a reaching task.
According to the fear-avoidance model, kinesiophobia (pain-related fear) is an important factor in the development of chronic pain and disability through the maintenance of maladaptive avoidance behaviors. Using a paradigm that required repeated exposure to a reaching task, the current study investigated generalization of pain and harm expectancy corrections (i.e., the tendency to bring expectations in line with experience) in chronic low back pain sufferers with high versus low levels of kinesiophobia. Sixty participants were asked to consecutively perform four adaptations of a reaching task, each introducing an element of increased intensity. ⋯ Further, highly kinesiophobic female, but not male, participants demonstrated greater overprediction of harm relative to low kinesiophobic counterparts during the first reaching trial. Finally, in contrast to previous investigations, highly kinesiophobic participants showed successful generalization of pain expectancy corrections across movement tasks. Possible clinical implications of the findings are noted.
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In patients with symptoms caused by intervertebral disk displacement, studies of epidural corticosteroid injections have produced compelling evidence of a short-term analgesic effect (lasting about 3 weeks), despite a number of discrepancies. In contrast, no reductions were noted in the time off work or need for surgery. Strong evidence supports a short-term symptomatic effect of guided transforaminal corticosteroid injections, and there is also some evidence of a long-term effect. ⋯ Intradural injections should not be performed, as they may induce adverse effects and have not been proved effective. Interspinous injections and iliolumbar ligament injections can be considered in selected patients. Although published data have led to controversy about the effectiveness of local corticosteroid injections, a short-term analgesic effect is usually obtained, making this modality useful for the second-line treatment of patients with disk-related sciatica, as well as in selected patients with chronic low back pain.