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The aim of this work is to evaluate the efficacy of adding alcohol to local anesthetics and steroids to provide pain relief in patients with sacroiliac joint pain.
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Low back pain (LBP) is one of the most common health problems globally. According to the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study 2021, low back pain is the leading cause of years lived with disability worldwide. It affects approximately 619 million people globally, and this number is projected to increase to 843 million by 2050 due to population growth and aging. (1) LBP may arise from multiple anatomical structures, such as muscle, intervertebral disc, fascia, and facet joint. Another common cause of LBP includes the sacroiliac joint (SIJ). It is estimated that around 10-38% of LBP cases originated from the SIJ. (2) In addition to its prevalence, SIJ pain lacks valid clinical/diagnostic tests and no therapeutic modalities for long-term improvement have been found yet. (3) Treatment of SIJ pain is another dilemma, and a wide range of therapeutic modalities has been used, including pharmacotherapy, chiropractic manipulation, SIJ injection (local anesthetics, steroid, or mixture), and surgical fixation. (4) Steroid and local anesthetic (LA) injections are widely used for managing SIJ pain, and evidence supports their effectiveness, particularly in the short to intermediate term but long-term benefit usually requires repeat injections or alternative treatments as radiofrequency or prolotherapy (5,6,7) Recently, alcohol neurolysis has gained popularity and become a well-established interventional technique in pain management, particularly for patients with chronic or cancer-related pain that is refractory to conventional therapies. (8)
Alcohol (Ethanol) in different concentrations (from 70% to 20%) has been used in different joints and pain syndromes such as trigeminal neuralgia, post-mastectomy pain syndrome, ankle pain from Morton neuroma and bursitis, and it proved its efficacy and safety. (9,10,11,12) Previous studies tried phenol injection in SIJ pain which acts nearly with the same mechanism of action as ethanol exerting a neurolytic effect through protein denaturation and nerve fiber destruction. Also proved its efficacy and safety. (13, 14) No previous studies used alcohol injection in SIJ.This study hypothesize that the use of alcohol (ethanol) 30% as an adjuvant to steroids and local anesthetics in SIJ as a novel approach may offer both short and long-term pain relief and reduce the frequency of repeated injections.
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54 participants in 2 patient groups
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Maged S GERGIS, MBBCH; Mohammed A Awad ElSaied Ahmed, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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