Superior cluneal nerve entrapment (SCN) is a painful symptomatic condition related to compression by the thoracolumbar and gluteal bands of nerve outcrop, above the iliac crest. This syndrome is not considered in the classical differential diagnosis of lumbosacral spine disorders and is almost unknown in Italy. It is a neuropathic pain, acute, subacute, or chronic, evoked by mechanical stress at the level of the sensory territory corresponding to the superior cluneal nerve, easily found anatomically and evoked at a trigger point on the posterior iliac crest approximately 70mm from the midline and 45mm from the posterior superior iliac spine. SCN entrapment syndrome represents a not so infrequent syndrome. It is easily framed and treatment is effective in most cases. Therefore, diagnosis and treatment of this syndrome represents an excellent option in all those patients with low back pain that cannot be otherwise framed and resolved.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
41
steroid injection into superior cluneal nerve
Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli
Bologna, Italy
numerical rating scale (NRS)
NRS is a numerical scale for assessing pain exclusively. It is precisely a numerical scale ranging from 0 to 10 where the degree of pain perceived by the patient is expressed in an increasing manner. The value 0 corresponds to the 'absence of pain, the valor
Time frame: at baseline (day 0)
numerical rating scale (NRS)
NRS is a numerical scale for assessing pain exclusively. It is precisely a numerical scale ranging from 0 to 10 where the degree of pain perceived by the patient is expressed in an increasing manner. The value 0 corresponds to the 'absence of pain, the valor
Time frame: after 45 days
Owestry Disability Index (ODI)
The ODI score is a scorecard on daily activities and the degree of limitation experienced by the patient with low back pain. The form consists of 10 multiple-choice questions (5 options) regarding different aspects of daily life such as pain intensity, personal care, walking, climbing stairs, standing up, sleeping, sexual sphere, social sphere, and traveling. At the end of the assessment, a percentage is assigned where 100% expresses the absence of limitations in performing daily activities. The further away from the maximum threshold, the greater the degree of disability the patient experiences.
Time frame: at baseline (day 0)
Owestry Disability Index (ODI)
The ODI score is a scorecard on daily activities and the degree of limitation experienced by the patient with low back pain. The form consists of 10 multiple-choice questions (5 options) regarding different aspects of daily life such as pain intensity, personal care, walking, climbing stairs, standing up, sleeping, sexual sphere, social sphere, and traveling. At the end of the assessment, a percentage is assigned where 100% expresses the absence of limitations in performing daily activities. The further away from the maximum threshold, the greater the degree of disability the patient experiences.
Time frame: after 45 days
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