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Cervical Epidural Pressure Measurement

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Seoul National University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Upper Extremity Pain
Neck Pain
Head Pain

Treatments

Procedure: epidural pressure measurement
Procedure: cervical epidural steroid injection

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01009385
snu23802

Details and patient eligibility

About

Cervical epidural steroid injections

  • The hanging drop (HD) technique is commonly used for identifying the cervical epidural space.
  • The hanging drop (HD) technique is using the negative pressure in the epidural space.
  • The subject of debate whether the epidural space exhibits negative pressure.
  • In a previous study, EP might be influenced by body position
  • No report or peer-reviewed literature to demonstrate the cervical epidural pressure (CEP) now.

The hypothesis of this study

  • There is a difference in the cervical epidural pressure between in the prone and sitting positions
  • To evaluate this hypothesis, CEPs in the prone and sitting groups were measured and compared in the two groups.
  • Using a closed pressure measurement system
  • Under fluoroscopic guidance.

Full description

Cervical epidural steroid injections (CESIs)

  • For the conservative management of head, neck, and upper extremity pain
  • Important to identify the epidural space for minimizing the chance of a dural puncture injection
  • Dural puncture injection makes CESIs prone to rare but catastrophic complication like permanent spinal cord injury

The hanging drop (HD) technique

  • Commonly used for identifying the cervical epidural space
  • Using the negative pressure in the epidural space
  • The subject of debate whether the epidural space exhibits negative pressure

In previous studies using a closed pressure measurement systems

  • The epidural pressure (EP) was commonly positive at the thoracic level in the lateral decubitus position.
  • EP was consistently negative only in the sitting position.
  • EP might be influenced by body position.
  • The patient should be sitting for using the HD technique.

No report or peer-reviewed literature to demonstrate the cervical epidural pressure (CEP) now.

The hypothesis of this study

  • There is a difference in the cervical epidural pressure between in the prone and sitting positions
  • To evaluate this hypothesis, CEPs in the prone and sitting groups were measured and compared in the two groups.
  • Using a closed pressure measurement system
  • Under fluoroscopic guidance.

Enrollment

30 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • cervical radicular pain caused by herniated nucleus pulpous and spinal stenosis
  • other conditions including herpes zoster-associated pain and sprain.

Exclusion criteria

  • contraindications for CESIs, such as coagulopathy, patient refusal or infection at the proposed insertion site
  • previous cervical spinal surgery
  • pregnancy.

Trial design

30 participants in 2 patient groups

prone position
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Procedure: epidural pressure measurement
Procedure: cervical epidural steroid injection
sitting position
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Procedure: epidural pressure measurement
Procedure: cervical epidural steroid injection

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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