Maniquis-Smigel Liza, Dean Reeves Kenneth, Jeffrey Rosen Howard, Lyftogt John, Graham-Coleman Cassie, Cheng An-Lin, Rabago David
Private Practice PM&R and Pain Management, Hilo and Honolulu, Hawaii, U.S.A.
Private Practice PM&R and Pain Management, Roeland Park, Kansas, Past Clinical Assistant/Associate Professor (1986-2015) University of Kansas Department of PM&R, Kansas City, Kansas.
Anesth Pain Med. 2016 Dec 6;7(1):e42550. doi: 10.5812/aapm.42550. eCollection 2017 Feb.
Hypertonic dextrose injection (prolotherapy) is reported to reduce pain including non-surgical chronic low back pain (CLBP), and subcutaneous injection of 5% dextrose is reported to reduce neurogenic pain, hyperalgesia and allodynia. The mechanism in both cases is unclear, though a direct effect of dextrose on neurogenic pain has been proposed. This study assessed the short-term analgesic effects of epidural 5% dextrose injection compared with saline for non-surgical CLBP.
Randomized double-blind (injector, participant) controlled trial. Adults with moderate-to-severe non-surgical low back pain with radiation to gluteal or leg areas for at least 6 months received a single epidurogram-confirmed epidural injection of 10 mL of 5% dextrose or 0.9% saline using a published vertical caudal injection technique. The primary outcome was change in a numerical rating scale (NRS, 0 - 10 points) pain score between baseline and 15 minutes; and 2, 4, and 48 hours and 2 weeks post-injection. The secondary outcome was percentage of participants achieving 50% or more pain improvement at 4 hours.
No baseline differences existed between groups; 35 participants (54 ± 10.7 years old; 11 female) with moderate-to-severe CLBP (6.7 ± 1.3 points) for 10.6 ± 10.5 years. Dextrose participants reported greater NRS pain score change at 15 minutes (4.4 ± 1.7 vs 2.4 ± 2.8 points; P = 0.015), 2 hours (4.6 ± 1.9 vs 1.8 ± 2.8 points; P = 0.001), 4 hours (4.6 ± 2.0 vs 1.4 ± 2.3 points; P < 0.001), and 48 hours (3.0 ± 2.3 vs 1.0 ± 2.1 points; P = 0.012), but not at 2 weeks (2.1 ± 2.9 vs 1.2 ± 2.4 points; P = 0.217). Eighty four percent (16/19) of dextrose recipients and 19% (3/16) of saline recipients reported ≥ 50% pain reduction at 4 hours (P < 0.001). These findings suggest a neurogenic effect of 5% dextrose on pain at the dorsal root level; waning pain control at 2 weeks suggests the need to assess the effect of serial dextrose epidural injections in a long-term study with robust outcome assessment.
据报道,高渗葡萄糖注射液(注射疗法)可减轻疼痛,包括非手术性慢性下腰痛(CLBP),且皮下注射5%葡萄糖可减轻神经源性疼痛、痛觉过敏和感觉异常。尽管有人提出葡萄糖对神经源性疼痛有直接作用,但这两种情况的机制尚不清楚。本研究评估了硬膜外注射5%葡萄糖与生理盐水相比对非手术性CLBP的短期镇痛效果。
随机双盲(注射者、参与者)对照试验。患有中度至重度非手术性下腰痛且放射至臀部或腿部区域至少6个月的成年人,采用已发表的垂直尾骨注射技术,接受一次经硬膜外造影确认的硬膜外注射10 mL 5%葡萄糖或0.9%生理盐水。主要结局是基线至15分钟以及注射后2、4、48小时和2周时数字评分量表(NRS,0 - 10分)疼痛评分的变化。次要结局是在4小时时疼痛改善50%或更多的参与者百分比。
两组之间基线无差异;35名参与者(54±10.7岁;11名女性)患有中度至重度CLBP(6.7±1.3分),病程为10.6±10.5年。葡萄糖组参与者在15分钟(4.4±1.7对2.4±2.8分;P = 0.015)、2小时(4.6±1.9对1.8±2.8分;P = 0.001)、4小时(4.6±2.0对1.4±2.3分;P < 0.001)和48小时(3.0±2.3对1.0±2.1分;P = 0.012)时报告的NRS疼痛评分变化更大,但在2周时无差异(2.1±2.9对1.2±2.4分;P = 0.217)。84%(16/19)的葡萄糖接受者和19%(3/16)的生理盐水接受者在4小时时报告疼痛减轻≥50%(P < 0.001)。这些发现表明5%葡萄糖对背根水平的疼痛有神经源性作用;2周时疼痛控制减弱表明需要在一项具有可靠结局评估的长期研究中评估连续硬膜外注射葡萄糖的效果。