Hazewinkel Merel H J, Bink Thijs, Hundepool Caroline A, Duraku Liron S, Zuidam J Michiel
Department of Plastic, Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery, Erasmus Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Plastic, Reconstructive Surgery and Hand Surgery, Amsterdam UMC, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2022 Jul 22;10(7):e4412. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000004412. eCollection 2022 Jul.
Extracranial compression of peripheral sensory nerves is one of many origins of chronic headaches. Identifying these patients can be difficult, and they are often diagnosed with neuralgia or cervicogenic headache. The recent literature provides the outcomes of surgical decompression in patients with these headaches. This study aimed to give an overview of the current literature on the nonsurgical treatment options and to evaluate the effectiveness of these treatments in patients with neuralgia and cervicogenic headache.
Databases were searched to identify all published clinical studies investigating nonsurgical treatment outcomes in patients with neuralgia or cervicogenic headaches. Studies that reported numerical pain scores, nonnumerical pain scores, headache-free days, or the number of adverse events after nonsurgical treatment were included.
A total of 22 articles were included in qualitative analysis. The majority of studies included patients who received injection therapy. Treatment with oral analgesics achieved good results in only 2.5% of the patients. Better outcomes were reported in patients who received local anesthetics injection (79%) and corticosteroid injection (87%). Treatment with botulinum toxin injection yielded the highest percentage of good results (97%; 95% CI, 0.81-1.00). The duration of headache relief after injection therapy varied from 30 minutes to 5 months.
The nonsurgical treatment of patients with neuralgia or cervicogenic headache is challenging. Injection therapy in patients with these types of headaches achieved good pain relief but only for a limited time. Surgical decompression may result in long-lasting pain relief and might be a more sustainable treatment option.
外周感觉神经的颅外压迫是慢性头痛的众多病因之一。识别这些患者可能很困难,他们常被诊断为神经痛或颈源性头痛。近期文献报道了这些头痛患者手术减压的结果。本研究旨在概述当前关于非手术治疗选择的文献,并评估这些治疗方法对神经痛和颈源性头痛患者的有效性。
检索数据库以识别所有已发表的调查神经痛或颈源性头痛患者非手术治疗结果的临床研究。纳入报告非手术治疗后数字疼痛评分、非数字疼痛评分、无头痛天数或不良事件数量的研究。
定性分析共纳入22篇文章。大多数研究纳入了接受注射治疗的患者。口服镇痛药治疗仅2.5%的患者取得良好效果。局部麻醉剂注射(79%)和皮质类固醇注射(87%)的患者报告了更好的结果。肉毒毒素注射治疗取得良好效果的比例最高(97%;95%CI,0.81 - 1.00)。注射治疗后头痛缓解的持续时间从30分钟到5个月不等。
神经痛或颈源性头痛患者的非手术治疗具有挑战性。这些类型头痛患者的注射治疗可实现良好的疼痛缓解,但持续时间有限。手术减压可能导致持久的疼痛缓解,可能是一种更可持续的治疗选择。