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Clinical Trial
. 1990 Aug;15(8):780-2.

Chronic unilateral low-back pain. Predictors of outcome of facet joint injections

Affiliations
  • PMID: 2146756
Clinical Trial

Chronic unilateral low-back pain. Predictors of outcome of facet joint injections

G Lilius et al. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 1990 Aug.

Abstract

One hundred nine patients with chronic (3-36 months; mean, 13.4 months) unilateral low-back pain and no signs of sciatica were subjected to facet joint injection, randomized in three therapy groups: cortisone and local anesthetic injected intra-articularly, the same mixture injected pericapsularly, and physiologic sodium hydrochloride injected intra-articularly into two facet joints. To evaluate the results, three outcome variables were formed: work, subjective, and disability outcome. The inappropriate signs (IAS) recorded before injections had the best predictability for a good outcome. The mode of injection or duration of symptoms had no significance as a predictor. It was concluded that the outcome after facet joint injection depends on the patient's biopsychosocial chances of self-facilitated improvement. If abnormal illness behavior and distress are found, it helps to estimate the response for treatment and to choose a realistic method of treatment.

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