Clinical results of lumbar sympathetic blocks in lower limb complex regional pain syndrome using infrared thermography as a support tool

Author:

Bovaira Maite1,Cañada‐Soriano Mar2ORCID,García‐Vitoria Carles1,Calvo Ana1,De Andrés José Antonio34ORCID,Moratal David5,Priego‐Quesada Jose Ignacio67

Affiliation:

1. Anaesthesia Department Hospital Intermutual de Levante Sant Antoni de Benaixeve Spain

2. Applied Thermodynamics Department (DTRA) Universitat Politècnica de València Valencia Spain

3. Anesthesia Unit‐Surgical specialties Department Valencia University Medical School Valencia Spain

4. Multidisciplinary Pain Management Department, Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care and Pain Management General University Hospital Valencia Spain

5. Center for Biomaterials and Tissue Engineering Universitat Politècnica de València Valencia Spain

6. Research Group in Sports Biomechanics (GIBD), Department of Physical Education and Sports University of Valencia Valencia Spain

7. Research Group in Medical Physics (GIFIME), Department of Physiology University of Valencia Valencia Spain

Abstract

AbstractAimTo describe the clinical outcomes for a group of complex regional pain syndrome patients using infrared thermography as an intraprocedural support tool when undertaking fluoroscopy‐guided lumbar sympathetic blocks.Subjects27 patients with lower limb complex regional pain syndrome accompanied by severe pain and persistent functional impairment.MethodsA series of three fluoroscopic‐guided lumbar sympathetic blocks with local anesthetic and corticoids using infrared thermography as an intraprocedural support tool were performed. Clinical variables were collected at baseline, prior to each block, and one, three, and six months after blocks in a standardized checklist assessing each of the clinical categories of complex regional pain syndrome stipulated in the Budapest criteria.Results23.75% of the blocks required more than one chance to achieve the desired thermal pattern and therefore to be considered as successful. A decrease in pain measured on a visual analogic scale was observed at all time points compared to pre‐blockade data, but only 37% of the cases were categorized as responders, representing a ≥ 30% decrease in VAS, with the disappearance of pain at rest. An improvement of most of the clinical variables recorded was observed, such as tingling, edema, perception of thermal asymmetry, difference in coloring and sweating. There was a significant decrease of neuropathic pain and improvement of functional limitation. Logistic regression analysis showed the main variable to explain the probability of being a responder was immobilization time (odds ratio of 0.89).ConclusionA series of fluoroscopy‐guided lumbar sympathetic blocks controlled by infrared thermography in the treatment of lower limb CRPS showed a responder rate of 37%.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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