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High Voltage VS Standard Voltage Radiofrequency in a Patient With Failed Back Surgery Syndrome

A

Assiut University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Failed Back Surgery Syndrome
Neuralgia

Treatments

Device: high-voltage long-term pulsed radio frequency (PRF)
Device: standard pulsed radio frequency (PRF)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05563636
AssiutU_HAA_RFA

Details and patient eligibility

About

Postoperative lumbar spine pain syndrome (FBSS) refers to patients who have undergone surgery for lumbar spine disease one or more times and still have intractable lumbosacral pain after surgery, with or without lower limb sensory and motor dysfunction. Pain is the main reason for reducing patients' quality of life. Hussain and Erdek believe that despite up to 3 months of postoperative intervention, pain may still exist. Since persistent pain seriously affects patients' daily life and work, optimizing the FBSS treatment plan and improving the quality of life of FBSS patients cannot be ignored. At present, the treatment methods for neuropathic pain radiated to the lower extremity after lumbar spine surgery mainly include oral drug therapy, nerve block, pulsed radio frequency (PRF) and spinal cord electrical stimulation, and other minimally invasive interventional methods. Still, there is no domestic or foreign treatment method is reported in the literature to be effective.

Full description

Selective nerve root PRF is an effective method for treating neuropathic pain, but its analgesic mechanism is still unclear. The traditional PRF adopts the standard 42 ℃ mode, but due to its low voltage (40 V), short duration (120 s), and limited intensity of action, the patient cannot get the best therapeutic effect. In recent years, high-voltage long-term PRF has been gradually applied to treating neuropathic pain such as postherpetic neuralgia, trigeminal neuralgia, and glossopharyngeal neuralgia, and achieved ideal results.

. Selective spinal nerve puncture under ultrasound and X-ray guidance: After the patient enters the operating room, the venous access is inserted, and the patient is placed in a prone position. ECG monitoring is given, and the patient's vital signs are continuously monitored. Routine sterilization and laying of sheets, puncture with an 20 G radiofrequency puncture needle under the guidance of ultrasound, repeated X-rays to confirm the position of the needle tip, when the needle tip reaches the target position, the X-ray front view will show that the needle tip of the puncture needle is located below the pedicle, and the lateral view shows The tip of the puncture needle is located at the posterior 1/2of the intervertebral foramen, then connect the radiofrequency treatment apparatus, perform sensory and motor tests, and perform sensory tests The pain in the corresponding innervated area is reproduced within 0.5 V and 50 Hz, and is consistent with the patient's original pain location; if >0.5 V does not induce pain in the original pain area, fine-tune the needle tip position and then perform the sensory test until 0.1 The needle tip position can be fixed when the patient's original pain can be induced within ~0.5 V. In the exercise test, muscle beats in the corresponding area were induced within 1.0 V and 2 Hz. After the test was successful, 1 ml of contrast agent will be injected, and the X-ray should show that the contrast agent spread along the nerve root and epidural space.

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

All

Ages

20 to 60 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients who have a history of lumbar spine surgery without instrumentation. , have clear symptoms of lumbar nerve root irritation, and unilateral lower extremity symptoms, and the straight leg raising test is positive

Exclusion criteria

  • Mechanical compression to nerve root
  • Spondylolisthesis, retrolithesis
  • Spondylodiscitis
  • Lumbar canal stenosis
  • Inflammatory low back pain
  • Coagulopathy
  • Local anesthetic allergy
  • Infection at the site of injection
  • Systemic infection

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

90 participants in 2 patient groups

control (group S)
Other group
Description:
patients will be given standard PRF treatment: temperature 42 ℃, frequency 2 Hz, pulse width 20 ms, voltage 37-41 V, time 120 s.
Treatment:
Device: standard pulsed radio frequency (PRF)
group H
Experimental group
Description:
patients will be given high-voltage long-term PRF treatment: temperature 42 ℃, frequency 2 Hz, pulse width 20 ms, the voltage range of 50-90 V, At the beginning, the patient will feel a severe burning sensation in the original pain area, and slowly after the patient tolerates it. Increase the voltage and gradually increase to the maximum voltage that the patient can tolerate (up to 70-90 V) until the end of 900 s.
Treatment:
Device: high-voltage long-term pulsed radio frequency (PRF)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Amani H Abdel-wahab, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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