• Pain Pract · Dec 2005

    Superior cluneal nerve entrapment eight years after decubitus surgery.

    • Mert Akbas, Arif Yegin, and Bilge Karsli.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Division of Algology, Akdeniz University Medical Faculty, Antalya, Turkey. akbasmert@akdeniz.edu.tr
    • Pain Pract. 2005 Dec 1; 5 (4): 364-6.

    Background And ObjectiveSuperior cluneal nerve (SCN) entrapment is one of the infrequent etiologies of low back pain (LBP), which is rarely diagnosed. Few clinical reports have been published in the literature. We present a case of severe LBP radiating to the ipsilateral buttock after decubitus surgery.Case ReportA 62-year-old man weighing 85 kg presented to the algology department, suffering from severe LBP of 6 months duration. The pain was in the right iliac crest region with radiation to the ipsilateral buttock. After admission, his history was taken, physical examination was performed, and further evaluations were made. He was suspected of having facet and right sacroiliac joint pain. Two tender points were found 6.5 and 7.5 cm to the right of the midline over the iliac crest. Local anesthetic with corticosteroid was injected at the tender points over the right iliac crest. Five minutes after the injection, the pain dissipated.ConclusionSCN entrapment should be considered in patients who suffer from LBP radiating to the iliac crest and buttock after other causes of LBP have been excluded.

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