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The Effect of Subcutaneous Fat Tissue Thickness on Lumbar Transforaminal Epidural Steroid Injection Treatment Success

M

Marmara University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Radiculopathy Lumbar
Obesity
Lumbar Disc Herniation

Treatments

Procedure: Transforaminal Epidural Steroid Injection

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05556538
MU-AS-SŞ-22.09.22

Details and patient eligibility

About

Nerve compression due to lumbar disc herniation and related radicular pain is a very common condition when the lifetime prevalence is considered. Lumbosacral radicular pain can be defined as pain originating from the lumbar level and spreading to the lower extremities along the distribution area of one or more spinal nerves. It is thought that the mechanical pressure of the disc material herniated to the dorsal nerve root or ganglion or the inflammation created by the chemokines and enzymes in the disc are involved in the pain formation mechanism.

Various methods such as medical agents, physical therapy modalities, epidural steroid injections and surgical methods can be used in the treatment of the related condition. Epidural injections have been used for the treatment of lower back and lower extremity pain since about 1900. Epidural injections exert their effects through the anti-inflammatory and neural membrane stabilizing effects of steroids, as well as by local anesthetics increasing blood flow to the ischemic spinal root and by the removal of cytokines from the area by the injection material. Epidural injections can be performed with various different approaches, including caudal, interlaminar and transforaminal. Among these approaches, the transforaminal approach is the most recently developed approach in the late 1990s, which allows drugs to be administered directly to the pathology area.

The effect of obesity, which is one of the factors thought to predispose to low back pain and lumbosacral radicular pain, has been evaluated in various studies and it has been found that it is positively correlated with low back pain and is an independent risk factor for lumbar herniation. So, does obesity have an effect on the success of transforaminal epidural steroid injection treatment? According to the literature, no significant effect on treatment success has been demonstrated.

Although the body mass index, which is used in the evaluation of obesity, has provided us important information about the health of the person in general for a long time, it is now thought to lead to an incomplete assessment. Because it does not provide information about body composition ratios (fat amount / lean body mass). Studies have shown that there is a high correlation between the percentage of body fat and the thickness of the subcutaneous fat tissue in the lumbar region, and there is a significant relationship between the lumbar region subcutaneous fat tissue thickness (especially L1-L2 level) and the degree of intervertebral disc degeneration and vertebral surface change. From this point of view, in another study, the L1-L2 disc level subcutaneous fat tissue thickness, was called the subcutaneous fat index, and the cut-off values that showed a significant relationship with spinal degeneration were determined.

In the study we planned, in cases of spinal radicular pain (etiologically caused by intervertebral disc herniation), body mass index, lumbar level subcutaneous fat tissue thickness and subcutaneous fat index data whether be or be not correlated with treatment effectiveness/success in patients who received transforaminal epidural steroid injection, and if so, the level of significance intended to work. Before applying for surgery, we aim to develop a practical approach that can be used by relevant clinicians and contribute to the literature, which can predict 'what level of treatment success can we achieve in which patient?' with this injection method.

Enrollment

52 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Being between the ages of 18-65
  • Patients with a diagnosis of lumbosacral radiculopathy with low back and leg pain for at least 3 months that did not respond to other treatment methods
  • Çalışmaya katılma için gönüllü olmak ve onam formu imzalamış olmak
  • Presence of single root nerve compression due to MR imaging-proven single-level lumbar disc herniation
  • Completeness of 3-month clinical evaluation data after the procedure

Exclusion criteria

  • Having had lumbosacral surgery
  • Multilevel disc herniation
  • Presence of foraminal disc herniation
  • Presence of local and/or systemic infection
  • History of malignancy
  • Presence of spinal stenosis
  • Pregnancy
  • Presence of known coagulopathy
  • Having a known psychiatric illness diagnosis
  • History of allergy to any of the injection substances
  • Epidural steroid injection in the last 3 months

Trial design

52 participants in 2 patient groups

Those who had TFESI and whose subcutaneous fat index was above the cut-off value
Description:
Those who are above the subcutaneous fat index cut-off values (9.4 mm in men, 8.45 mm in women) will be included in this group.
Treatment:
Procedure: Transforaminal Epidural Steroid Injection
Those who had TFESI and whose subcutaneous fat index was below the cut-off value
Description:
Those who are below the subcutaneous fat index cut-off values (9.4 mm in men, 8.45 mm in women) will be included in this group.
Treatment:
Procedure: Transforaminal Epidural Steroid Injection

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Savaş Şencan; Ahmet Saç

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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