Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, OSS Health, 1855 Powder Mill Rd, York, PA 17402, USA.
Sports and Spine Division, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington, 3800 Montlake Blvd NE, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Spine J. 2019 Jan;19(1):163-170. doi: 10.1016/j.spinee.2018.05.029. Epub 2018 May 22.
Lumbosacral radicular symptoms are commonly evaluated in clinical practice. Level-specific diagnosis is crucial for management. Clinical decisions are often made by correlating a patient's symptom distribution and imaging with sensory dermatomal maps. It is common for patients to describe non-dermatomal symptom patterns and for imaging to demonstrate pathology at levels not predicted by a dermatomal map. These observations suggest that the referred symptom distribution from lumbosacral nerve root provocation is different from dermatomal maps. This phenomenon has been demonstrated in the cervical spine but not in the lumbosacral spine.
The objective of this study was to characterize potential lumbosacral radicular symptom referral patterns induced during transforaminal epidural injections.
STUDY DESIGN/SETTING: This is an observational descriptive study.
The patient sample included 71 consecutive patients with lumbosacral radicular pain undergoing lumbosacral transforaminal epidural injections at an outpatient interventional spine practice.
Each subject drew the location of provoked lumbosacral radicular symptoms on a pain diagram.
Seventy-one consecutive patients undergoing 125 fluoroscopically guided lumbosacral transforaminal epidural injections at an outpatient interventional spine practice were included in the study. The described location of provoked symptoms was recorded (1) after final needle positioning, (2) after injection of up to 0.5 mL of contrast solution, and (3) after injection of up to a 1 mL test dose of 1% lidocaine. Each subject drew the location of provoked symptoms on a diagram. The provoked symptom diagrams for each lumbosacral segmental level were combined to create composite nerve root, level-specific, symptom referral pattern maps.
Of the 125 injections, 87 provoked referred symptoms and were included in the analysis. Thirty-eight injections did not provoke referred pain symptoms and were excluded from further analysis. Four nerve roots were tested at L1 and eight were tested at L2. Because of the small number of subjects, composite diagrams and statistical analysis were not completed for these levels. Eleven nerve roots were analyzed at L3, 28 at L4, 34 at L5, and 11 at S1. Composite symptom referral pattern maps were created for levels L3, L4, L5, and S1. Although the symptom distribution occasionally followed the expected dermatomal maps, most often the referral was outside of the patterns expected for each level. The most common symptom referral pattern for levels L3-S1 was the buttock, the posterior thigh, and the posterior calf.
The level-specific provoked symptom distribution during lumbosacral transforaminal epidural injections is frequently different from that predicted by classic lumbosacral dermatomal maps. Referred pain to the buttock, the posterior thigh, or the posterior calf may come from L3, L4, L5, or S1 nerve root segmental irritation.
腰骶神经根症状在临床实践中经常被评估。针对特定水平的诊断对于治疗至关重要。临床决策通常是通过将患者的症状分布和影像学表现与感觉皮节图相关联来做出的。患者常描述非皮节样症状模式,影像学显示的病变水平与皮节图预测的不符。这些观察结果表明,腰骶神经根刺激引起的牵涉性症状分布与皮节图不同。这种现象在颈椎中已经得到证实,但在腰骶椎中尚未得到证实。
本研究的目的是描述经椎间孔硬膜外注射时潜在的腰骶神经根症状牵涉模式。
研究设计/设置:这是一项观察性描述性研究。
患者样本包括在一家门诊介入脊柱科接受腰骶部经椎间孔硬膜外注射的 71 例腰骶神经根痛患者。
每位患者均在疼痛图上画出诱发腰骶神经根痛的位置。
本研究纳入了在一家门诊介入脊柱科接受 125 例透视引导下腰骶部经椎间孔硬膜外注射的连续 71 例患者。记录了诱发症状的位置(1)在最后一针定位后,(2)在注射 0.5 毫升造影剂后,和(3)在注射 1 毫升 1%利多卡因试验剂量后。每位患者均在图表上画出诱发症状的位置。将每个腰骶节段的诱发症状图组合起来,绘制出复合神经根、特定节段的症状牵涉模式图。
在 125 次注射中,有 87 次诱发了牵涉痛症状,并纳入了分析。38 次注射未诱发牵涉痛症状,被排除在进一步分析之外。L1 测试了 4 根神经根,L2 测试了 8 根。由于受试者数量较少,因此未完成这些水平的复合图和统计分析。对 L3 分析了 11 根神经根,L4 分析了 28 根,L5 分析了 34 根,S1 分析了 11 根。绘制了 L3、L4、L5 和 S1 水平的复合症状牵涉模式图。虽然症状分布偶尔符合预期的皮节图,但大多数情况下,牵涉痛的部位并不在每个水平的预期范围内。L3-S1 最常见的症状牵涉模式是臀部、大腿后侧和小腿后侧。
腰骶部经椎间孔硬膜外注射时,特定节段的诱发症状分布与经典腰骶皮节图预测的结果常常不同。臀部、大腿后侧或小腿后侧的牵涉痛可能来自 L3、L4、L5 或 S1 神经根节段性刺激。