Affiliation:
1. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
2. Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Genicular nerve radiofrequency ablation (RFA) for the treatment of chronic knee pain has traditionally targeted the superomedial, superolateral, and inferomedial genicular nerves. However, recent cadaveric studies of knee neuroanatomy demonstrate varied locations of these specific nerves as well as additional articular nerves. This work suggests that traditional genicular nerve RFA lesion locations may be inadequate.
Objective
1) To describe a novel protocol utilizing a three-tined RFA electrode to target the superomedial (SMGN), superolateral (SLGN), and inferomedial genicular nerves (IMGN), as well as the terminal articular branches of the nerves to the vastus medialis (NVM), intermedius (NVI), and lateralis (NVL). 2) To assess the ability of this technique to reduce chronic knee pain.
Methods
Case series of consecutive patients with six or more months of refractory knee pain who underwent genicular nerve RFA according to the novel protocol described. Seven discrete RFA lesions were placed to target the SMGN, NVM, NVI, NVL, SLGN, and IGMN.
Results
Eleven patients underwent RFA, nine with knee osteoarthritis and two postarthroplasty. At one month, 91% (95% CI = 59–100%), 82% (95% CI = 48–98%), and 9% (95% CI = 2–41%), of patients reported ≥50%, ≥80%, and 100% improvement in knee pain on the numeric rating scale, respectively. These results were sustained at six months. There were no complications.
Discussion/Conclusions
These preliminary data suggest the feasibility and possible effectiveness of genicular nerve RFA using the described novel protocol including a three-tined electrode. Larger-scale studies with comparative groups are warranted.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Neurology (clinical),General Medicine
Cited by
20 articles.
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