Affiliation:
1. Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN
Abstract
Background: Selective nerve root blocks or transforaminal epidural injections are used for
diagnosis and treatment of different spinal disorders. A clear consensus on the use of selective
nerve root injections as a diagnostic tool does not currently exist. Additionally, the effectiveness
of this procedure as a diagnostic tool is not clear. A systematic review of diagnostic utility of
selective nerve root blocks was performed and published in January 2005, which concluded that
selective nerve root injections may be helpful as a diagnostic tool in evaluating spinal pain with
radicular features, but its role needs to be further clarified.
Objective: To evaluate and update the accuracy of selective nerve root injections in diagnosing
spinal disorders.
Study Design: A systematic review of selective nerve root blocks for the diagnosis of spinal
pain.
Methods: A systematic review of the literature for clinical studies was performed to assess
the accuracy of selective nerve root injections in diagnosing spinal pain. Methodologic quality
evaluation was performed utilizing Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and Quality
Assessment Studies of Diagnostic Accuracy (QUADAS) criteria. Studies were graded and evidence
classified into 5 levels: conclusive, strong, moderate, limited, or indeterminate. An extensive
literature search was performed utilizing resources from the library at Vanderbilt University Medical
Center, PubMed, EMBASE, BioMed, and Cochrane Reviews. Manual searches of bibliographies of
known primary and review articles, and abstracts from scientific meetings within the last 2 years
were also reviewed.
Results: There is limited evidence on the effectiveness of selective nerve root injections as
a diagnostic tool for spinal pain. There is insufficient research for stronger support, but the
available literature is supportive of selective nerve root injections as a diagnostic test for equivocal
radicular pain. There is moderate evidence for use in the preoperative evaluation of patients with
negative or inconclusive imaging studies. The positive predictive value of diagnostic selective
nerve root blocks is low, but they have a useful negative predictive value.
Conclusion: Selective nerve root injections may be helpful as a diagnostic tool in evaluating
spinal pain with radicular features. However, their role needs to be further clarified by additional
research and consensus.
Keywords: Selective nerve root block, transforaminal epidural injection, spinal pain, discogenic
pain, radiculopathy, nerve root pain
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
20 articles.
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