EUCTR2010-023262-46-GB
Active, not recruiting
Phase 1
A Randomised Prospective Pilot Study Comparing the Outcomes of Patients with Lumbar Nerve Root Pain Secondary to Lumbar Disc Prolapse Treated by Nerve Root Block with or without the Addition of Clonidine. - 1.Treatment of lumbar nerve root pain with nerve block +/- clonidine
Royal Devon & exeter Foundation trust0 sites100 target enrollmentDecember 8, 2010
Drugscatapres.
Overview
- Phase
- Phase 1
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- umbar nerve root pain secondary to disc prolapse.
- Sponsor
- Royal Devon & exeter Foundation trust
- Enrollment
- 100
- Status
- Active, not recruiting
- Last Updated
- 6 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
No summary available.
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Patients aged 18\-65 y.o. complaining of nerve root pain, radiating into one leg, caused by an MRI scan proven lumbar nerve root compression secondary to lumbar disc prolapse at a single level of the lumbar spine. They will not have undergone any previous secondary care intervention (surgery, previous nerve root block) for this current nor a previous complaint.
- •Are the trial subjects under 18? no
- •Number of subjects for this age range:
- •F.1\.2 Adults (18\-64 years) yes
- •F.1\.2\.1 Number of subjects for this age range
- •F.1\.3 Elderly (\>\=65 years) no
- •F.1\.3\.1 Number of subjects for this age range
Exclusion Criteria
- •Patients refusing informed consent for admission to the study. This will include patients who opt for surgical treatment as their first treatment option.
- •Patients aged under 18 or over 65 y.o.
- •Previous secondary care intervention in the lumbar spine (surgery, previous nerve root block)
- •Nerve root pain caused by infection, fracture, tumour, cauda equina syndrome, spinal stenosis (central, lateral recess or foraminal)
- •Lumbar disc prolapse causing cauda equina syndrome\- a condition which compromises the nerves that control bladder, bowel and sexual function. This is a condition requiring urgent surgical decompression and it would not be ethical to include patients with this condition in this study.
- •Disc prolapse causing nerve root compression at more than one level of the lumbar spine
- •Patients unable to understand the consenting process
- •\- Patient allergic to any of the injectates
- •\-Patients with known ischaemic heart disease, exertional angina
- •\-Patients with known hypotension
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Not specified
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