Iliohypogastric or ilioinguinal nerve injury

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spondy14

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Has anyone seen this before. I have a pt. with severe low back, R flank pain and groin pain (unrelenting) ever since undergoing a CT guided radiofrequency ablation (5weeks) of a kidney tumor and has documented attenuation in the psoas on post-procedure CT. Need to r/o discitis and radic first, but I am afraid it will just be a waiting game.
1. Do you think an L1 or L2 TFESI would do anything?

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if there is even the suspicion of infection - don't stick a needle...

psoas abscesses usually have that pain pattern and are hellish to manage - usually don't respond to narcotics too well, and the patients can never be made comfortable.
 
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Are you sure you're not dealing with "loin pain hematuria syndrome?" This is an under-recognized pain problem that sometimes responds to kidney auto-transplantation.

J Urol. 1997 May;157(5):1554-9.

Autotransplantation as an effective therapy for the loin pain-hematuria syndrome: case reports and a review of the literature.

Spitz A, Huffman JL, Mendez R.
Department of Urology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA.

PURPOSE: The loin pain-hematuria syndrome is a well recognized but poorly understood clinical condition in which patients have progressive loin pain accompanied by hematuria but they maintain stable renal function. We present 2 cases effectively treated with renal autotransplantation, as well as a review of the literature, and a coherent algorithm for the diagnosis and treatment of this condition. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The medical literature concerning the loin pain-hematuria syndrome was reviewed. In 1994 we performed renal autotransplantation on 2 patients with the loin pain-hematuria syndrome at our institution. RESULTS: Extensive urological evaluation revealed no obvious underlying abnormalities in patients with the loin pain-hematuria syndrome. Theories for the pathogenesis of this condition range from thrombotic phenomena to autoimmune processes. Treatment efforts have been directed primarily towards pain management. Narcotic dependence becomes progressive as the pain becomes debilitating. In extreme cases nephrectomy is performed despite normal renal function. Several invasive methods of nerve block and enervation provide only temporary relief. Renal autotransplantation provided lasting cessation of loin pain in both of our patients with followup of 1.5 and 2.5 years, and this intervention has been shown to provide the most durable pain relief in other series. CONCLUSIONS: Renal autotransplantation provides the most durable, nonnarcotic, nephron sparing relief for patients with the loin pain-hematuria syndrome. Further investigation is necessary to elucidate the pathophysiology of this debilitating condition.
 
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