• J Am Acad Orthop Sur · Apr 2007

    Review

    The use of lumbar epidural/transforaminal steroids for managing spinal disease.

    • Irene A Young, Garrett S Hyman, Llewellyn N Packia-Raj, and Andrew J Cole.
    • Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington, WA, USA.
    • J Am Acad Orthop Sur. 2007 Apr 1;15(4):228-38.

    AbstractLumbar epidural steroid injections are used to manage low back and leg pain (ie, sciatica). Utilization of the procedure is increasing, with Medicare spending for lumbar epidural procedures topping $175 million annually. Few prospective randomized controlled trials have clearly demonstrated the efficacy of epidural steroid injections; many have shown conflicting results. Several studies show favorable short-term outcomes with epidural steroid injection for radicular pain, but less conclusive results are achieved >6 months. Methodologic flaws limit interpretation of results from most scientific studies. As a tool for predicting surgical outcome, epidural spinal injection has been found to have a sensitivity between 65% and 100%, a specificity between 71% and 95%, and a positive predictive value as high as 95% for 1-year surgical outcome. Despite inconclusive evidence, when weighing the surgical alternatives and associated risk, cost, and outcomes, lumbar epidural steroid injections are a reasonable nonsurgical option in select patients.

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