Leonardo Kapural MD, PhD and Taif Mukhdomi MD Weill Cornell Medical College, Weill Cornell Pain Medicine, New York, NY, USA The prevalence of chronic pain from the hip is between 7% and 10% in the population older than 45 years of age [1]. Further, symptomatic painful arthritis of the hip has been shown to affect 9.2% of adults who are ≥ 45 years of age (9.3% female, 8.7% male) [2]. Chronic hip pain is a result of osteoarthritis, hip fractures, and dislocations, labral tears, bursitis, and avascular necrosis [1, 2]. Current conservative therapies include physical therapy, NSAIDS, opioids, intra-articular injections of steroids and visco-supplements [3, 4], while hip arthroplasty is considered the more definitive treatment of chronic hip pain [5]. Lateral femoral and lateral obturator sensory nerves radiofrequency ablation (RFA) provides a significant, clinically meaningful long-term improvement in pain scores for patients with advanced osteoarthritis, avascular necrosis or even previous arthroplasty of the hip joint. The innervation of the joint is complex [6, 7] involving the lateral branches of obturator nerve (Figure 46.1) and articular branches of the femoral nerve, innervating the anteromedial hip, and anterior portion of the joint capsule, respectively. The sciatic nerve supplies the majority of the posterior hip. Groin hip pain is mostly generated by lateral branches of the obturator nerve (Figure 46.1), while trochanteric pain is carried by lateral articular branches of the femoral nerve [6]. Described approaches to denervation of the affected hip are based on our understanding of anatomy of the hip innervation and location of vulnerable surrounding structures [7–21]. The radiologic landmark for the articular branches of the ON, is the point immediately inferior to the “teardrop” silhouette, formed by the junction of pubic and ischial bones (often referred to as the incisura of the acetabulum), which is seen on anteroposterior fluoroscopy (Figures 46.1 and 46.3). The lateral edge of the obturator foramen lies medial to the needle tip, with the acetabular wall situated laterally (Figure 46.1). A point immediately inferior and medial to the anterior inferior iliac spine on anteroposterior fluoroscopy is the landmark for the articular branches of the FN. Currently, hip denervation techniques include conventional and cooled RF denervation using various approaches: anterior, lateral, and inferior (Figures 46.1–46.3). First, the anterior ischial and lateral approach using only fluoroscopy guidance has been described [8–13] (Figure 46.3a,b). Authors used a 22G RF probe, providing limited denervation to the rather wide frequency of articular branches with variable courses. Further, any conclusions on efficacy of used techniques were precluded as of few patients studied and short-time interval follow-up [8–18].
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Complications of Lateral Obturator and Lateral Femoral Nerve Block and Radiofrequency Ablation for Hip Denervation
Carolinas Pain Institute and Chronic Pain Research Institute, Winston-Salem, NC, USA
Introduction
Anatomy
Indications
Contraindications
Technique