• Pain · Nov 1998

    Case Reports

    Lumbar epidural block for 'painful legs and moving toes' syndrome: a report of three cases.

    • Yasuhisa Okuda, Keiko Suzuki, Toshimitsu Kitajima, Ritsuko Masuda, and Takashi Asai.
    • First Department of Anesthesiology, Dokkyo University School of Medicine Mibu, Tochigi, 321-0293, Japan Department of Anesthesiology, Chiba Hokusoh Hospital, Nippon Medical School, Inba-mura, Chiba, 270-1694, Japan Department of Anesthesiology, Kansai Medical University Moriguchi, Osaka, 570-8507, Japan.
    • Pain. 1998 Nov 1; 78 (2): 145-147.

    AbstractWe report the effective use of epidural block in three patients with 'painful legs and moving toes' syndrome, which is characterized by involuntary movements of the toe (and sometimes of the foot) and excruciating pain in the leg. Several treatments had been unsuccessful in the management of the three patients reported including baclofen, benzodiazepines, carbamazepine and antidepressants. In two patients, lumbar sympathetic block was performed, the symptoms being alleviated temporarily in one patient. In contrast, injections of mepivacaine into epidural space suppressed pain and movements in all patients. In one patient, symptoms disappeared for many years after several epidural blocks. In the remaining two patients, epidural injections were repeated when the symptoms were severe.

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