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- Seppe Dehaene, Jeroen Biesemans, Koen Van Boxem, Wesley Vidts, Joeri Sterken, and Jan Van Zundert.
- Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care, Pain and Emergency Medicine, OLV van Lourdes Ziekenhuis, Waregem, Belgium.
- Pain Pract. 2021 Jan 1; 21 (1): 83-87.
IntroductionCervical epidural corticosteroid injections are frequently used for the treatment of subacute cervicobrachial pain. This therapy is considered safe, with the vast majority of the complications being minor and transient.Case ReportWe present a case of a woman in her fifties who suffered from cervicobrachialgia and received 2 cervical epidural corticosteroid infiltrations. On day 3 after the second infiltration, a new headache appeared and on day 16 a bilateral subdural hematoma was visualized on CT scan. Complete resorption of the hematoma was seen on day 25 without surgical intervention.DiscussionUp until now, only 1 case report of an intracranial subdural hematoma after a cervical epidural steroid injection has been published. But several cases of an intracranial subdural hematoma after spinal, epidural, or combined spinal and epidural anesthesia have been reported. Physicians should be aware of this potentially dramatic complication since post-dural puncture headache after any type of procedure can evolve into a subdural hematoma. Clinical differentiation between the two can be difficult; post-dural puncture headache is characterized by relief of symptoms in the supine position and photophobia/phonophobia. A subdural hematoma should be considered if the headache changes in character, does not respond to treatment, or there are neurological signs such as nausea/vomiting and blurred vision. Immediate medical imaging should then be performed.© 2020 The Authors. Pain Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of World Institute of Pain.
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