Pudendal neuralgia (PN) is a chronic nerve compression syndrome causing neuropathic pain. Treatment includes medication, infiltration and decompressive surgery. Medicinal treatment involves the use of drugs that have proved effective in other areas, such as shingles or diabetes. There is no consensus on the molecules to be used for pudendal nerve infiltration (PNTI), and less than half of patients experience short-term relief. The only risk factor for failure is the duration of pain. Our study proposes to compare the usual treatment with a placebo, as no type of infiltration has been compared with a placebo.
Like carpal tunnel syndrome, pudendal neuralgia (PN) is defined as a syndrome of chronic nerve compression (of the pudendal nerve) causing neuropathic pain. Treatment of NP is based on 3 therapeutic strategies of increasing aggressiveness: drug treatment, infiltrations and decompressive surgery. Drug treatment is based on the "empirical" use of drugs for neuropathic pain that have proved effective in other areas (shingles, diabetes, etc.). People with this disease are generally considered 'non-responders' to drug treatment after failure (decrease in VAS scale \< 3) of at least one antidepressant and one antiepileptic drug, whose doses have been increased to the maximum possible level, or in whom a side effect has prevented the dose from being increased to the maximum authorised level. For pudendal nerve infiltration (ITNP), there is no consensus or recommendation on which molecules to use. Most studies have used a combination of local anaesthetics and corticosteroids. However, a randomised controlled trial, researchers compare lidocaine infiltration with or without methylprednisolone. The results were not significantly different (14% vs 11%). According to the data in the literature, less than half of patients (11% to 39%) are relieved in the short term, up to 3 months, and only about 10% (6.8% to 12.2%) are still relieved at 1 year. The only recognised risk factor for failure seems to be the duration of pain (more than 1 year). Other risk factors have been described in the literature, but only in one study and not in the others, such as gender (male or female), age (over or under 70), duration of pain (over or under 1 year), and whether the pain is bilateral or not. In our department, patients are currently treated with lidocaine INTP under neurostimulation. Given the poor results in terms of efficacy and the strong psychological component in chronic pain pathologies, the investigators propose in this study to compare our usual treatment with placebo, since no type of infiltration has ever been compared with placebo, although this is a condition where the placebo effect is likely to be large.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
60
Infiltration by injections of 6mL of lidocaine (10 mg/mL) per injection site (left ischioanal fossa, right ischioanal fossa right ischioanal fossa, coccyx),
Infiltration by injections of 6mL of saline solution per injection site (left ischio-anal fossa, right ischio-anal fossa right ischio-anal fossa, coccyx)
Hôpital Croix Saint-Simon
Paris, France
RECRUITINGComparison between the two treatment arms (lidocaine vs.saline) of the rate of patients with a decrease of at least 3 points on a visual 3 points on a visual analogue pain scale (VAS) between inclusion and
Time frame: between inclusion and 1 month after the first injection.
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