BACK PAIN

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BACK PAIN BACK PAIN A Pain Specialist's Perspective

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BACK PAIN A Pain Specialist's Perspective. BACK PAIN. DR J KURIAN MD MRCP FRCA FFPM CONSULTANT ANAESTHESIA AND PAIN MEDICINE. INTERVENTIONAL PAIN MANAGEMENT. Background. Neurosurgical ablative treatments for pain since 19th century but now infrequently used - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of BACK PAIN

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BACK PAIN

BACK PAIN

A Pain Specialist's Perspective

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INTERVENTIONAL PAIN MANAGEMENT

DR J KURIAN MD MRCP FRCA FFPMCONSULTANT

ANAESTHESIA AND PAIN MEDICINE

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Background

• Neurosurgical ablative treatments for pain since 19th century but now infrequently used

• Ablation eclipsed by percutaneous injections or therapies that target central or peripheral pathways

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Pain

An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience which we primarily associate with tissue damage or describe in terms of such damage, or both

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Pain Pathophysiology

• Nociceptive pain• Neuropathic pain

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Nociception

The detection of tissue damage by specialized transducers connected to A-delta and C-fibers

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Classification of Pain Nociception

• Proportionate to the stimulation of the nociceptor

• When acute– Physiologic pain– Serves a protective function– Normal pain

• Pathologic when chronic

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Classification of Pain:Neuropathic Pain

• Sustained by aberrant processes in PNS or CNS

• Disproportionate to the stimulation of nociceptor

• Serves no protective function• Pathologic pain

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Peripheral and Central Pathways for PainAscending TractsAscending Tracts Descending TractsDescending Tracts

Cortex

Midbrain

Medulla

Spinal Cord

Thalamus

Pons

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Central sensitization

Peripheral sensitization

CNS

PNS

CNScentralnervous system

“Healthy” nociceptors

Normaltransmission

Central reorganization

Abnormalnociceptors

Physiologic state

Nociceptive Pain Neuropathic Pain

PNSperipheral nervous system

Pathologic Pathologic statestate

Pappagallo M. 2001.

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Overview

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Chronic Pain Syndrome

• End result of a variety of pathological and psychological mechanisms that may have included, at some stage tissue or nerve damage.

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Pain Interventions

• Nerve blocks and injections should be seen as part of a process of education and rehabilitation, allowing an opportunity for mobilization and return to normal activity.

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Nerve Blocks (1)

• Diagnostic: local anaesthetic only, to clarify mechanism or simulate effects of therapy

• Therapeutic: anaesthetise a site or pathway temporarily(local anaesthetic) or “permanently”(lytic agent, cryo, radiofrequency) or reduce inflammation (corticosteroids)

• A block may be diagnostic and therapeutic eg. Symapthetic block or trigger point injection

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Nerve Blocks (1)

• Diagnostic: local anaesthetic only, to clarify mechanism or simulate effects of therapy

• Therapeutic: anaesthetise a site or pathway temporarily(local anaesthetic) or “permanently”(lytic agent, cryo, radiofrequency) or reduce inflammation (corticosteroids)

• A block may be diagnostic and therapeutic eg. Symapthetic block or trigger point injection

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Nerve Blocks (II) Common blocks for chronic pain include -Trigger-point injection -Bier block -Peripheral nerve injection (eg. Ilioinguinal,lateral

femoral cutaenous, greater occipital) -Epidural injection -Intra-articular(eg.facet, SI joint) Sympathetic block(cervical, lumbar) Plexus block (coeliac, hypogastric)

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Nerve Blocks (III)

• Case reports, preclinical data support long lasting effects of local anaesthetic blockade - RCTs support lytic coeliac block

• However, unclear how much clinical improvement reflects placebo effects, irrevelant cues, systematic absorption of local anaesthetic, expectations

• Side effects possible• Rarely successful as a stand alone strategy for chronic pain

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Trigger Point Injection• Myofascial pain syndrome• Taut band palpable (if muscle is accessible)• Exquisite spot tenderness of a nodule in a taut band• Pressure on tender nodule reproduces pain• Range of motion with stretch limited by pain• Techniques• Dry needling• Local anaesthetic only• Local anaesthetic and steroid• Botulinum toxin

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Epidural Injection (I)

• Employed for decades using various techniques materials and patients

• Limited RCT evidence of efficacy• Cervical, Thoracic, Lumbar , Caudal• Trans laminar• Transforaminal

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Epidural Injection(II)

• Applied for symptomatic relief in• Disc protrusion with radiculopathy• Spinal stenosis(circumferential or transforaminal)• Acute pain, local inflammation of vertebral fracture• Acute herpes Zoster• May facilitate rehabilitation, avert surgery when

applied within multidisciplinary frame work

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Steroid Injections

• Interlaminar Epidural

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Nerve Root Injection

• Diagnostic Establish or confirm mechanism of pain

• Therapeutic Local anaesthetic plus corticosteroid

• Technique Fluroscopy or CT essential for needle placement with contrast confirmation

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INTRA ARTICULAR INJECTIONS

• Facet and Sacroiliac joints most common

• Diagnostic facet syndrome or SI joint pain Simulate results of potential spinal fusion or denervation

of medial branch of dorsal ramus

• Therapeutic (local anaesthetic + corticosteroid) Reduce inflammation, pain Increase mobility, facilitate rehabilitation

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Specific anatomic syndromes

• Facet syndrome

Continuous pain worsened by rotation and extensionRadiation into the leg or gluteal area, in a non-dermatomal distributionTenderness over the joints and paravertebral muscle spasm

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Sacroiliac joint injection

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Symapthetic Blocks

• Diagnostic• Stellate ganglion• Lumbar• Therapeutic• CRPS of upper and lower extremity• Vascular insufficiency• Refractory angina• Technique• Local anaesthetic, Neurolytic

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MISCELLANEOUS

• Trigeminal ganglion

• Glossopharyngeal nerve

• Sphenopalatine ganglion

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NEWER DEVELOPMENTS

• PULSED RADIOFREQUENCY• VERTEBROPLASTY• IDET, DISCTRODE• DORSAL COLUMN STIMULATORS• PERIPHERAL NERVE STIMULATORS• DEEP BRAIN STIMULATORS• IMPLANTABLE PUMPS

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Managing Pain

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CONCLUSION

• Interventional approaches are often reserved for patients with well established problems, failure of other treatments and pronounced disability.

• Do we miss an opportunity for early cost effective preventive treatment by reserving interventions for those least likely to benefit?

• “Doctors think a lot of patients are cured who have simply quit in disgust”

• DON HEROLD 1889