Impact of fluoroscopic injection location on immediate and delayed pain relief in patients with greater trochanteric pain syndrome

Object The purpose of this study was to assess whether fluoroscopically guided corticosteroid injections into the extrabursal tissues, trochanteric (subgluteus maximus) bursa, or subgluteus medius bursa provide better immediate and short-term pain relief. Materials and methods All fluoroscopically g...

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Veröffentlicht in:Skeletal radiology 2020-10, Vol.49 (10), p.1547-1554
Hauptverfasser: Mao, Lisa J., Crudup, John B., Quirk, Cody R., Patrie, James T., Nacey, Nicholas C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Object The purpose of this study was to assess whether fluoroscopically guided corticosteroid injections into the extrabursal tissues, trochanteric (subgluteus maximus) bursa, or subgluteus medius bursa provide better immediate and short-term pain relief. Materials and methods All fluoroscopically guided corticosteroid injections performed over a 67-month period for greater trochanteric pain syndrome were retrospectively reviewed. Procedural images were reviewed by two musculoskeletal radiologists to determine the dominant injection site based on final needle positioning and contrast spread pattern, with discrepancies resolved by consensus. Statistical analysis of the association between pain score reduction and dominant injection site was performed. Results One hundred forty injections in 121 patients met the inclusion criteria. The immediate and 1-week post-injection pain reduction was statistically significant for trochanteric bursa, subgluteus medius bursa, and non-bursal injections. However, there was no statistically significant difference in the degree of pain reduction between the groups. There was statistically significant increase in the 1-week post-injection mean pain score compared with immediate post-injection mean pain score in the subgluteus medius bursa and non-bursal injection groups ( p  
ISSN:0364-2348
1432-2161
DOI:10.1007/s00256-020-03451-7