Although epidural steroid injections (also called epidural corticosteroid injections) may be helpful to confirm a diagnosis, they should be used primarily after a specific presumptive diagnosis has been established. Also, injections should not be used in isolation, but rather in conjunction with a program stressing muscle flexibility, strengthening, and functional restoration.
Proper follow-up after injections to assess the patient's treatment response and ability to progress in the rehabilitation program is essential. A limited number of injections can be tried to reduce pain, but careful monitoring of the response is required prior to a second or third injection.
Epidural steroid injections are an adjunct treatment, which facilitates participation in an active exercise program and may assist in avoiding the need for surgical intervention.
Treatment Rationale
The rationale for the use of epidural corticosteroid injection has improved with the evidence of an inflammatory basis for radicular pain from disc herniation. Epidural steroids have been shown to be effective in pain reduction in patients with radicular pain, although controlled prospective trials are lacking. The efficacy is increased if used in the first weeks following onset.
The goal of these injections is to facilitate an active exercise program and to progress patients through the pain and inflammation stage of recovery as quickly as possible. As with all injections, it should be part of a comprehensive treatment plan involving active exercise.
How the Injection Is Performed
It is not necessary for most patients to undergo a set number or "series" of injections. If minimal to no improvement is found after two injections, then further similar injections are not warranted. The more recent use of a transforaminal approach allows the medication to be delivered in a more targeted fashion to the more ventral aspect of the spinal canal at the level of the presumed site of pathology.
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Use of Epidural Steroid Injections
Epidural injections and intradiscal injections have been used in the treatment of non-radicular degenerative disc disease with limited success.
In addition, epidural steroids have been used in patients with neurogenic claudication from spinal stenosis with mixed results. A limited number of injections can be tried in these patients to reduce pain thought to be at least in part mediated by inflammation.
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