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Does Dry Needling Affect Treatment Outcomes of Interlaminar Epidural Steroid Injection in Cervical Disc Herniation?

The Effect of Dry Needling on the Treatment Outcomes of Interlaminar Epidural Steroid Injection in Patients With Chronic Neck Pain Due to Cervical Disc Herniation.

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04914637
Enrollment
66
Registered
2021-06-04
Start date
2021-06-04
Completion date
2021-11-01
Last updated
2023-11-29

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Pain, Myofacial, Pain, Neck, Pain, Chronic

Keywords

myofascial trigger point pain, disc, herniated, epidural injections

Brief summary

Chronic neck pain is among the most frequently seen chronic painful conditions. As an important cause of disability, chronic neck pain is a musculoskeletal disorder that negatively affects quality of life. Cervical disc herniation is one of the leading causes of chronic neck pain and conservative methods such as exercise and pain medications are used first in the treatment. In patients unresponsive to conservative treatment, epidural steroid injection is successfully and frequently used treatment option. Epidural steroid injection in the cervical region can be applied with two approaches: interlaminar or transforaminal. Myofascial trigger point characterized by intramuscular taut band and hypersensitive spots is a condition in which central and peripheral sensitization play a role in the pathophysiology. There are underlying myofascial trigger points in many etiologies that cause chronic neck pain. Trigger points can increase the severity of pain and in some cases they can be the main factor in the etiology of pain. Therefore, the presence of myofascial trigger points should be investigated, even if another cause is detected in chronic neck pain. Dry needling is an easily applicable and effective treatment option in myofascial trigger point. Although it is well known that myofascial trigger points frequently accompany cervical disc herniation, their effect on treatment outcomes has not been investigated. In this study, we aimed to investigate the effect of dry needling for trigger points on the treatment results of interlaminar epidural steroid injection in patients diagnosed with cervical disc herniation.

Interventions

Fluoroscopy-guided cervical interlaminar epidural steroid injection will be administered to patients with chronic neck pain due to cervical disc herniation. The injection area is cleaned 3 times with an antiseptic solution and covered with a sterile cloth. Local anesthesia with 2 cc 3% prilocaine will be applied to the skin and subcutaneous tissues in the area of interest. Under fluoroscopy guidance, the needle is advanced into the C7-T1 intervertebral disc level. With the help of the loss of resistance technique, it is understood that the needle is in the epidural space, and second control is provided by administering contrast material. After the confirmation of needle place is done, a mixture of 12 mg dexamethasone, 1 cc 2% lidocaine, 1 cc saline is injected. The patient is taken to the rest room after the procedure and followed up for any complications.

PROCEDUREDry needling

Dry needling will be applied to the active trigger points for the patients in this group. After cleaning the area of interest with an antiseptic solution, dry needling will be applied with the fast-in/fast-out technique for the active trigger point. During needle maneuvers, local contractions (local twitch response-LTR) are obtained and rapid needle movements are continued until the contractions end. Afterwards, the needle is removed and compression is applied to ensure hemostasis in the relevant area.

PROCEDURESham dry needling

Although the method of intervention is like dry needling, the only difference is that the blunt end of the needle is used and it does not penetrate the skin.

Sponsors

Marmara University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Between the ages of 18-65 * Chronic neck pain due to cervical disc herniation for at least 3 months and being unresponsive to conservative treatment * Presence of at least one active myofascial trigger point on physical examination of cervical paraspinal muscles, scapulothoracic muscles and extremity muscles.

Exclusion criteria

* Previous surgical/interventional procedure for the cervical region * Previous application of dry needling/acupuncture to any part of the body * Presence of other musculoskeletal disorders (such as lateral epicondylitis, tendinitis, entrapment neuropathy) that may cause diagnostic confusion in terms of pain pattern and localization * Signs of trauma, fracture, malignancy, or active infection * Rheumatological (RA, AS, etc.), endocrinological (such as osteoporosis, Paget's disease) or another systemic disease that may change the anatomical or physiological structure of the relevant regions * Presence of coagulopathy * History of whiplash injury, cervical spinal stenosis, cervical spondylosis * Have a diagnosis of fibromyalgia * Being pregnant and breastfeeding * Presence of mental deterioration or psychiatric/neurological disease that can affect flow of the study.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change of pain severity from baseline to each checkpointsfrom pre-interventional time to post-interventional 1st hour, 3rd week, 3rd monthPain severity will be assessed with Numeric Rating Scale (NRS). The patient scores his/her pain between 0-10. Higher score indicates more severe pain
Change of the number of active trigger points from baseline to each checkpointsfrom pre-interventional time to post-interventional 3rd week, 3rd monthThe number of active trigger points will be determined by clinical examination. The trigger point will be defined as active if it causes spontaneous pain or pain occured during the examination is familiar to the patient.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change of depression severity from baseline to each checkpointsfrom pre-interventional time to post-interventional 3rd week, 3rd monthSeverity of depression will be assessed with Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). BDI scoring ranges from 0 to 63, with a high score indicating an increased severity of depression.
Change of the number of the patients with neuropathic pain from baseline to each checkpointsfrom pre-interventional time to post-interventional 3rd week, 3rd monthThe number of patients with neuropathic pain will be assessed with Douleur Neuropathique 4 Questions (DN4). Scores ≥ 4/10 indicate presence of neuropathic pain.
Change of the number of the patients with central sensitization from baseline to each checkpointsfrom pre-interventional time to post-interventional 3rd week, 3rd monthThe number of patients with central sensitization will be assessed with The number of patients with neuropathic pain will be assessed with Central Sensitisation Inventory (CSI). The CSI is composed of two parts: Part A and part B. Only Part A is scored and a score of more than 40 indicates the presence of central sensitisation.
Change of the measurement of quality of life from baseline to each checkpointsfrom pre-interventional time to post-interventional 3rd week, 3rd monthThe measurement of quality of life will be assessed with Short Form-12 Survey (SF-12). Two summary scores are reported from the SF-12 - a mental component score (MCS-12) and a physical component score (PCS-12). A high score indicates better quality of life.
Change of the measurement of disability related with chronic neck pain from baseline to each checkpointsfrom pre-interventional time to post-interventional 3rd week, 3rd monthThe measurement of disability will be assessed with Neck Disability Index (NDI). The NDI can be scored as a raw score (0-50) or doubled and expressed as a percent (0%-100%). A higher score indicates more activity limitation.
Change of the measurement of sleep quality from baseline to each checkpointsfrom pre-interventional time to post-interventional 3rd week, 3rd monthThe measurement of sleep quality will be assessed with Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). 7 components are evaluated and each component is scored between 0-3; the total score is between 0-21. Higher total score indicates poor sleep quality.
Change of the pain sensitivity of active trigger points from baseline to each checkpointsfrom pre-interventional time to post-interventional 3rd week, 3rd monthThe measurement of pain sensitivity will be done by using manual algometer. Measurement will be made from active trigger points and the average of 3 measurements will be taken. The higher score indicates more resistance to pain.

Countries

Turkey (Türkiye)

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026