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Low back pain (LBP) is a common complaint in the clinical setting. Among all the differential diagnosis for LBP, superior cluneal nerve (SCN) entrapment is the commonly omitted one. The superior cluneal nerve is the terminal branch of the lateral branches of the posterior rami of the L1-L3 spinal nerves, which passes through the osseous tunnel interposed between the thoracolumbar fascia and iliac crest. This nerve can be entrapped due to poor posture, trauma or stretching of the surrounding thoracolumbar fascia and osseous membrane. The cardinal symptom of the superior cluneal nerve entrapment is buttock pain. Sometimes the pain may radiate to the lower limb, which mimics sciatica, and makes the diagnosis difficult. Early diagnosis and treatment of SCN entrapment is crucial, which can facilitate the improvement of health related quality of life and decrement the socioeconomic loss due to disability.
The study aims is (1) to scan the SCN and thoracolumbar fascia by ultrasound in patients with LBP and normal subjects. The transcutaneous electrical stimulation will be used to confirm the location of SCN by asking the subject to depict the sensory distribution after stimulation; (2) to analyze the related factors of LBP with SCN entrapment, which may help in setting up the diagnostic criteria of SCN entrapment; (3) to analyze the therapeutic effect of perineural injection to SCN in SCN entrapment, and to find the factors that related responsiveness.
Full description
Introduction:
Superior cluneal nerve (SCN) entrapment is the commonly omitted diagnosis in chronic low back pain. The superior cluneal nerve is the terminal branch of the lateral branches of the posterior rami of the L1-L3 spinal nerves, which passes through the osseous tunnel interposed between the thoracolumbar fascia and iliac crest. This nerve can be entrapped due to poor posture, trauma or stretching of the surrounding thoracolumbar fascia and osseous membrane. The cardinal symptom of the superior cluneal nerve entrapment is buttock pain. Sometimes the pain may radiate to the lower limb, which mimics sciatica, and makes the diagnosis difficult. Early diagnosis and treatment of SCN entrapment is crucial, which can facilitate the improvement of health related quality of life and decrement the socioeconomic loss due to disability.
Material and methods:
Participants: Adult patients (>20 year old) with low back/buttock pain. The pain consists area of iliac crest.
Control : healthy adult subjects (>20 year old) without low back
Exclusion criteria: non-mechanical low back pain, referred low back pain (tumor, infection, inflammatory arthritis, Scheuermann disease,Paget disease, herpetic neuralgia), trauma, acute compression fracture, acute herniated disc, underwent nerve block within 3 months.
Study design:
(1) To scan the SCN and thoracolumbar fascia by high-resolution ultrasound in patients with LBP and normal subjects. The transcutaneous electrical stimulation will be used to confirm the location of SCN by asking the subject to depict the sensory distribution after stimulation; (2) to analyze the related factors of LBP with SCN entrapment, which may help in setting up the diagnostic criteria of SCN entrapment; (3) to analyze the therapeutic effect of perineural injection to SCN in SCN entrapment, and to find the factors that related responsiveness.
Detail of the intervention
Outcome measurement:
Primary outcome :
at baseline one month and three months after injection
Secondary outcome:
Statistical analysis:
Continuous variables
Student's t test: fit assumption of normal distribution
Mann-Whitney test: does not fit the assumption of normal distribution Categorical variables
Chi-square test 2. Fisher exact test: sparse data
Multivariate analysis:
Generalized Estimating Equations
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Participants:
Exclusion criteria:
Primary purpose
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30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Ke-Vin Chang, MD,PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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