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Regional anesthesia · Sep 1997
Case ReportsTrigger point injections for myofascial pain during epidural analgesia for labor.
- L C Tsen and W R Camann.
- Department of Anesthesia, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
- Reg Anesth. 1997 Sep 1;22(5):466-8.
Background And ObjectivesMyofascial pain is the leading cause of chronic low back pain and in most cases can be successfully resolved with trigger point injections of local anesthetics. This type of pain can exist during pregnancy and exceed the analgesia provided by an epidural for labor.MethodsA 31-year-old primiparous woman received an epidural infusion for labor analgesia. Despite complete resolution of labor pain and a solid, bilateral T10 block, the patient reported discomfort at two discrete locations in her right lumbar paraspinous muscle.ResultsThe administration of local anesthetic via trigger point injections resulted in successful palliation of the myofascial pain.ConclusionsMyofascial pain can be an etiology of back pain in the parturient. Trigger point injections, even when used concomitantly with a functioning epidural infusion, can be a valuable aid for the provision of complete analgesia.
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