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The Selective Intraperineural Nerve Root Block Study
Sponsor: Xi'an Honghui Hospital
Summary
Before lumbosacral decompression surgery for radicular pain, selective nerve root block(SNRB) is a common procedure to identify the responsible compressed nerve root(RCNR) and predict surgical outcomes. However, the diagnostic accuracy of conventional SNRB is unsatisfactory, especially in terms of specificity. The main limitation is the uncontrolled distribution of anesthetics during injection: when anesthetics spread to surrounding soft tissues instead of acting directly on the RCNR, false-negative results may occur with persistent radicular pain; when anesthetics diffuse to two or more nerve roots including the RCNR, false-positive results may occur even if a normal nerve root is punctured, leading to misdiagnosis. This study aims to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of a novel three-dimensional computed tomography multiplanar volume reconstruction (3D-CT MPVR) guided selective intraperineural nerve root block(SINRB) for identifying the RCNR in patients with lumbosacral radicular pain. The investigators hypothesize that this technique will achieve higher diagnostic specificity and overall accuracy than conventional SNRB, by ensuring anesthetics are delivered directly to the target nerve root. This improvement will help clinicians make more accurate surgical plans, achieve better targeted decompression, and ultimately improve postoperative pain relief and functional recovery for patients. The main research questions to be addressed in this study are: * What is the procedural success rate of SINRB? * Whether SINRB may cause clinically detectable nerve injury? * Whether sciatica is relieved after SINRB when only the responsible compressed nerve root is blocked? * Whether sciatica is relieved after SINRB when only a normal unaffected nerve root is blocked? Participants will: * Undergo one or two SINRB procedures and a single-level lumbar decompression surgery * Get assessment of pain, mobility disorder and neurological function
Official title: Feasibility, Safety and Diagnostic Accuracy of Selective Intraperineural Nerve Root Block for Identifying Compressed Nerve Root in Lumbosacral Radicular Pain. A Prospective Cohort Study
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 90 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
80
Start Date
2026-04-13
Completion Date
2027-01-01
Last Updated
2026-04-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Selective Intraperineural Nerve Root Block(SINRB)
The patient was placed in a standard prone position. The cutaneous puncture point was confirmed via large C-arm oblique fluoroscopy with the projection angle strictly consistent with the preoperative protocol.All puncture manipulations were completed by an experienced spinal surgeon. Under intermittent fluoroscopic guidance, the puncture trajectory was adjusted to keep the needle parallel to the fluoroscopic beam, followed by slow needle advancement until radiating pain was evoked in the patient. The needle was further advanced approximately 1 mm, and 0.2 mL contrast medium was injected subsequently. The visualization of a linear streak shadow within the nerve root confirmed intraneural positioning. The needle was fixed in situ, and 0.5 mL lidocaine was injected.
single-level lumbar decompression surgery
All patients underwent single-level lumbar surgery with either endoscopic or conventional open single nerve root decompression, and postoperative anteroposterior and lateral lumbar radiographs were routinely obtained for imaging evaluation.
Locations (1)
Xi'an Honghui Hospital (North Campus)
Xi'an, Shaanxi, China