Affiliation:
1. Dept. of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Mercy Medical Center, Des Moines, Iowa
Abstract
Background: The clinical application of pulsed radiofrequency (PRF) by interventional pain
physicians for a variety of chronic pain syndromes, including occipital neuralgia, is growing. As a
minimally invasive percutaneous technique with none to minimal neurodestruction and a favorable
side effect profile, use of PRF as an interventional neuromodulatory chronic pain treatment is
appealing.
Occipital neuralgia, also known as Arnold’s neuralgia, is defined by the International Headache
Society as a paroxysmal, shooting or stabbing pain in the greater, lesser, and/or third occipital
nerve distributions. Pain intensity is often severe and debilitating, with an associated negative
impact upon quality of life and function. Most cases of occipital neuralgia are idiopathic, with no
clearly identifiable structural etiology. Treatment of occipital neuralgia poses inherent challenges
as no criterion standard exists. Initially, conservative treatment options such as physical therapy
and pharmacotherapy are routinely trialed. When occipital neuralgia is refractory to conservative
measures, a number of interventional treatment options exist, including: local occipital nerve
anesthetic and corticosteroid infiltration, botulinum toxin A injection, occipital nerve subcutaneous
neurostimulation, and occipital nerve PRF. Of these, PRF has garnered significant interest as a
potentially superior, safe, non-invasive treatment with long-term efficacy.
Objective: The objective of this article is to provide a concise review of occipital neuralgia; and a
concise, yet thorough, evidence-based review of the current literature concerning the use of PRF
for occipital neuralgia.
Study Design: Review of published medical literature up through April 2013.
Setting: The Center for Pain Medicine and Regional Anesthesia, the University of Iowa Hospitals
and Clinics.
Results: A total of 3 clinical studies and one case report investigating the use of PRF for knee
occipital neuralgia have been published worldwide. Statistically significant improvements in pain,
quality of life, and adjuvant pain medication usage have been demonstrated.
Limitations: Lack of randomized control trials, small study sample sizes, an absence of diagnostic
block imaging guidance, and the use of outcome measures that are inherently subjective, limiting
objectivity and introducing an unquantifiable degree of bias.
Conclusion: Clinical studies to date examining the efficacy of PRF as a treatment for occipital
neuralgia have yielded promising results, demonstrating sustained improvement in pain, quality
of life, and adjuvant pain medication usage. Despite these encouraging clinical studies, conclusive
evidence in support of PRF as an interventional treatment option for occipital neuralgia awaits to
be seen.
Key words: Occipital neuralgia, pulsed radiofrequency, PRF, greater occipital nerve, lesser
occipital nerve, chronic pain, interventional pain management
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
13 articles.
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