◔
Cervical Retrolaminar Injection: Difference between revisions
From WikiMSK
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
|local=Lidocaine 0.5% | |local=Lidocaine 0.5% | ||
|volume=4mL | |volume=4mL | ||
}}The cervical retrolaminar injection is an experimental treatment for [[Cervical Radicular Pain and Radiculopathy|cervical radicular pain]]. As a fascial plane block it is theoretically safer than epidural corticosteroid injection. The target point is the cervical retrolaminar plane - between the lamina and cervical multififus muscle. This technique may be considered safer than ESI. Injection at C6 has been shown to spread from C2-T3. | }}The cervical retrolaminar injection is an experimental treatment for [[Cervical Radicular Pain and Radiculopathy|cervical radicular pain]]. As a fascial plane block it is theoretically safer than epidural corticosteroid injection. The target point is the cervical retrolaminar plane - between the lamina and cervical multififus muscle. This technique may be considered safer than ESI. Injection at C6 has been shown to spread from C2-T3.<ref name="Hochberg"/> | ||
==Technique== | ==Technique== | ||
Line 28: | Line 18: | ||
==Resources== | ==Resources== | ||
{{Members link}} | {{Members link}} | ||
See closed access article<ref>{{#pmid:33660679}}</ref> | See closed access article<ref name="hochberg">{{#pmid:33660679}}</ref> | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
[[Category:Cervical Spine Procedures]] | [[Category:Cervical Spine Procedures]] |
Revision as of 12:28, 23 April 2022
This article is a stub.
Cervical Retrolaminar Injection | |
---|---|
Indication | Cervical radicular pain |
Needle | 22g 50mm needle |
Steroid | 10mg dexamethasone |
Local | Lidocaine 0.5% |
Volume | 4mL |
The cervical retrolaminar injection is an experimental treatment for cervical radicular pain. As a fascial plane block it is theoretically safer than epidural corticosteroid injection. The target point is the cervical retrolaminar plane - between the lamina and cervical multififus muscle. This technique may be considered safer than ESI. Injection at C6 has been shown to spread from C2-T3.[1]
Technique
Ultrasound Guided
- Position: prone
- 22G 50mm needle inserted in plane of the transducer.
- Target point posterior aspect of lamina of target segment, under the cervical multififus muscle.
- Inject 4 mL of Lidocaine 0.5% with 10 mg (1 mL) dexamethasone was injected.
Resources
See closed access article[2]
References
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
<ref>
tag; no text was provided for refs namedHochberg
- ↑ Hochberg et al.. A New Solution to an Old Problem: Ultrasound-guided Cervical Retrolaminar Injection for Acute Cervical Radicular Pain: Prospective Clinical Pilot Study and Cadaveric Study. Spine 2021. 46:1370-1377. PMID: 33660679. DOI.