Lumbar sympathetic block for pain relief in two patients with interstitial cystitis. (Shimane Medical University, Izumo, Japan) Reg Anesth Pain Med 2001;26:271–273. |
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Authors: | Katsushi Doi Yoji Saito Tetsuro Nikai Noriko Morimoto Toshihiko Nakatani Shinichi Sakura |
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Abstract: | This case report discussed the effective treatment of interstitial cystitis (IC) with regard to a 63-year-old woman and a 78-year-old woman. Medical therapy with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, anticholinergics, and hydrodistention of the bladder failed to improve their symptoms. Subsequently, a continuous lumbar epidural block using 1% mepivacaine was used in these patients. A transient reduction of the symptoms in both patients was achieved. A lumbar sympathetic block with a neurolytic agent produced almost complete and long-lasting relief of their symptoms. Conclude that lumbar sympathetic block using a neurolytic agent produced long-lasting pain relief in 2 patients with IC. Comment by Pedro F. Bejarano, M.D. Chronic visceral pain association to the neurovegetative system and to sympathetically-maintained mechanisms has been well documented nowadays. The multiple neural connections among different abdominal nerve plexus has also been described, and this anastomoses may account for the observed analgesic effects in this case obtained without specific blockade of the superior hypogastric plexus. Despite the reported good results, the use of the lumbar approach may be controversial in this cases, as the uncomfortable peripheral effects of a permanent lumbar sympathetic neurolytic block (i.e.: lower limb vasodilation) favors a more anatomically restricted (visceral) area like that obtained with a superior hypogastric approach. We must remark that the existence of Sympathetically mediated and/or maintained pain is not enough phenomenae to fit the diagnostic criteria of a RCPS, as suggested by the authors, but it is less so in the case of an evidently persistent, organic source of visceral nociception like in the Intersticial Cystitis disease. |
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