Steroid Shots for Back Pain
Are essentially worthless. So don't bother.
When it comes to treating chronic back pain with sciatica, epidural steroid injections may only bring small, short-term relief, according to a group of neurology professionals.
Sciatica is pain running down the back of the leg, where the sciatic nerve is located. It often accompanies back pain.
In reaching its conclusion, the American Academy of Neurology's Therapeutics and Technology Assessment Subcommittee reviewed four studies on epidural steroid injections for back pain with sciatica.
Based on the findings, epidural steroid shots are not recommended for long-term back pain relief, improving back function, or preventing back surgery, write neurology professor and subcommittee member Carmel Armon, MD, MHS, and colleagues.
Taken together, the four studies show that patients who got epidural steroid shots had a slight drop in pain two to six weeks after the injection, compared with patients who got epidural shots containing no medicine (placebo injections).
However, the epidural steroids didn't relieve back pain more than the placebo at 24 hours, three months, or six months after administration, the review shows.
The epidural steroid shots also didn't appear to improve the patients' average back function or help patients avoid back surgery.
"While some pain relief is a positive result in and of itself, the extent of leg and back pain relief from epidural steroid injections, on the average, fell short of the values typically viewed as clinically meaningful," Armon says in an American Academy of Neurology news release.
Armon's team didn't have enough data to evaluate the use of epidural steroid shots for neck pain.
With few high-quality studies to review, the researchers call for further studies on epidural steroid injections for neck and back pain.



5 Comments:
I'm still trying to convince my mom that we should try a little home-made acupuncture...buahaha.
Not to mention the risk of arachnoiditis. I'd steer clear of any spinal injections without a truly compelling need.
my uncle developed a spinal abcess after one of these, was in and out of rehab for months, first from the excruciating pain and then once the abcess was diagnosed receiving multiple rounds of increasingly powerful antibiotics.
Injections are always a problem for me:
http://backandneckpain.shoutpost.com/
I was hit by a car a few years ago and since then I have suffered a lot of lower back pain and back ache! I was on strong painkillers for awhile but then I was getting addicted to them so had to drop them before it got too bad. That was about a year ago now and since then I have been looking for alternate ways of relieving the pain and aching until a month ago I was struggling to find anything that helped but I managed to get hold of a memory foam and I finally got a good night’s sleep! It was great!
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