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NCT05638074
Does the Presence of Cervical Facet Tropism Affect the Response to Interlaminar Epidural Steroid Injections?
Conditions: Cervical Disc Herniation, Cervical Radicular Pain, Facet Tropism
Sex: All
Ages: 18 Years – 65 Years
Enrollment: 90
Sponsor: Janbubi Jandaulyet
Location: Turkey
Summary
Facet joints are synovial joints located on the dorsolateral side of the vertebral column.
Normally, both facet joints are symmetrical.
Facet tropism (FT) is defined as asymmetry between the angles of orientation of the joints, in which a facet joint in the same segment is more sagittally oriented than the other.
In 1967, Farfan and Sullivan first reported that FT is a possible risk factor for the development of disk herniation.
However, this is controversial as there are other views advocating that FT is not a risk factor for the development of cervical disc herniation.
Further, it has been emphasized that patients with FT have a greater need for adjacent segment degeneration and new spinal surgery after spinal fusion surgeries than those without FT.In the current literature, studies have been conducted to examine the clinical and radiological parameters that may be related to the effectiveness of cervical interlaminar epidural steroid injections (ILESI).
The aim of this study was to examine the effect of the presence of FT on ILESI results in patients with cervical disc herniation-induced radicular pain.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:aged 18-75 years, who applied to the pain medicine outpatient clinic, had axial neck and unilateral radicular extremity pain for at least 3 months, and were diagnosed with protruded disc herniation by magnetic resonance imaging were included in the studyExclusion Criteria:Patients with systemic inflammatory disease, bleeding diathesis,history of psychiatric illness, malignancy, contrast material or local anesthetic agent allergy, cervical spinal stenosis, history of cervical ESI, or neck surgery in the last 3 months were excluded from the study
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05638074). StuddyBuddy aggregates publicly available trial information.