• Anesth Pain Med · Apr 2016

    Review

    Efficacy of Percutaneous Adhesiolysis in the Treatment of Lumbar Post Surgery Syndrome.

    • Laxmaiah Manchikanti, Kavita N Manchikanti, Christopher G Gharibo, and Alan D Kaye.
    • Pain Management Center of Paducah, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, USA.
    • Anesth Pain Med. 2016 Apr 1; 6 (2): e26172.

    ContextLumbar post-surgery syndrome is common and often results in chronic, persistent pain and disability, which can lead to multiple interventions. After failure of conservative treatment, either surgical treatment or a nonsurgical modality of treatment such as epidural injections, percutaneous adhesiolysis is often contemplated in managing lumbar post surgery syndrome. Recent guidelines and systematic reviews have reached different conclusions about the level of evidence for the efficacy of epidural injections and percutaneous adhesiolysis in managing lumbar post surgery syndrome. The objective of this systematic review was to determine the efficacy of all 3 percutaneous adhesiolysis anatomical approaches (caudal, interlaminar, and transforaminal) in treating lumbar post-surgery syndrome.Evidence AcquisitionData SourcesA literature search was performed from 1966 through October 2014 utilizing multiple databases.Study SelectionA systematic review of randomized trials published from 1966 through October 2014 of all types of epidural injections and percutaneous adhesiolysis in managing lumbar post-surgery syndrome was performed including methodological quality assessment utilizing Cochrane review criteria, Interventional Pain Management Techniques-Quality Appraisal of Reliability and Risk of Bias Assessment (IPM-QRB), and grading of evidence using 5 levels of evidence ranging from Level I to Level V.Data ExtractionThe search strategy emphasized post-surgery syndrome and related pathologies treated with percutaneous adhesiolysis procedures.ResultsThe search criteria yielded 16 manuscripts on percutaneous adhesiolysis assessing post-surgery syndrome. Of these, only 4 randomized trials met inclusion criteria for methodological quality assessment, 3 of them were of high quality; and the fourth manuscript was of low quality. Based on these 3 randomized controlled trials, 2 of them with one-day procedure and one with a 3-day procedure, the level of evidence for the efficacy of percutaneous adhesiolysis is Level II based on best evidence synthesis.ConclusionsBased on this systematic review, percutaneous adhesiolysis is effective in managing patients with lumbar post-surgery syndrome after the failure of conservative management including fluoroscopically directed epidural injections.

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