Interventional Treatments for Sacroiliac Joint Pain
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Interventional pain treatments for cancer pain.
Cancer pain is prevalent and often multifactorial. For a segment of the cancer pain population, pain control remains inadequate despite full compliance with the WHO analgesic guidelines including use of co-analgesics. The failure to obtain acceptable pain or symptom relief prompted the inclusion of a fourth step to the WHO analgesic ladder, which includes advanced interventional approaches. Int...
متن کاملEVIDENCE-BASED MEDICINE Evidence-based Interventional Pain Medicine according to Clinical Diagnoses 13. Sacroiliac Joint Pain
The sacroiliac joint accounts for approximately 16% to 30% of cases of chronic mechanical low back pain. Pain originating in the sacroiliac joint is predominantly perceived in the gluteal region, although pain is often referred into the lower and upper lumbar region, groin, abdomen, and/ or lower limb(s). Because sacroiliac joint pain is difficult to distinguish from other forms of low back pai...
متن کاملPain provocation tests for diagnosis of sacroiliac joint pain.
There are many tests devised to provide information about sacroiliac joint (SIJ) pain and function. Only pain provocation SIJ tests have been shown to have satisfactory inter-examiner reliability and validity with respect to a meaningful reference standard. These tests apply stress to the SIJ to determine if the usual pain is produced or aggravated and have been described in the orthopaedic med...
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Neuropathic pain originates from a lesion within the central or peripheral nervous system. The signs of neuropathic pain include heat hyperalgesia, mechanohyperalgesia, and mechanoand cold allodynia. Traditionally, neuropathic pain responds poorly to conventional analgesics. This chapter will provide recommendations for medical and interventional management of neuropathic pain conditions based ...
متن کاملSacroiliac joint pain: Diagnosis and treatment
Introduction Over the last two decades, the sacroiliac joint (SIJ) has increasingly been recognized as an anatomical source of pain that figures in the differential diagnosis of a patient presenting with low back pain (LBP) and/or buttock pain with or without more distant referred pain.1-7 The SIJ is innervated and thus has the potential to be a source of pain.2,8-13 As SIJ pain refers into the...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Current Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Reports
سال: 2014
ISSN: 2167-4833
DOI: 10.1007/s40141-014-0042-5