Acta Clinica Croatica (Jan 2023)
The Influence of Different Minimally Invasive Methods on the Outcome of Lumbar Radicular Pain Treatment
Abstract
Lumbar radicular pain is a major public health, social and economic problem and is often the cause of professional disability. The aim of this study was to compare pain intensity, disability and neuropatic pain depending on the method of treatment (epidural steroid injection or percutaneous laser disc decompression) in the treatment of lumbar radicular pain caused by intervertebral disc herniation with or without discoradicular contact. Data were collected from 28 patients at 3 measurement points (before the procedure and at examinations on the 15th and 30th day after the procedure) using the Numeric Rating Scale (NRS), Oswestry Disabilitiy Indeks (ODI) and Pain Detect. The reduction of the pain after the procedure was statistically significant only in the group of patients with discoradicular contact in whom PLDD was performed (P=0.04). From the obtained results, it can be concluded that percutaneous laser disc decompression (PLDD) led to a greater reduction in disability (P=0.009) in patients with discorradicular contact, whereas lumbar transforaminal epidural steroid injection (ESI TF) led to greater reduction in patients without discorradicular contact (P=0.02). The results indicate that there was a significant (P=0.01) reduction in neuropathic pain in patients without discorradicular contact who were treated with ESI TF and in patients with discoradicular contact who were treated with PLDD (P=0.04).
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