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Get OB/GYN permission (they will say OK) and document. Do injection with no radiation. BTW back pain is not ordinarily an indication for ESI.consulted for an epidural steroid injection during 1st trimester because of significant pain low back pain. I want to say no, but want to make sure. Would have to be blind, right?
Thoughts?
Never touch a preggo. They decided to grow a parasite and there is 18 years of time during which they can decide some random thing in the kids life was your fault and sue.
No procedures on preggos particularly epidurals with or without x Ray.
technically, TENS is "contraindicated" in pregnancy...I had one that I gave a TENS unit to in the first trimester. She did well through gestation and labored to 8 cm. Then she wanted an epidural but OB said too late.
I’ve done a few over the last 20 years for acute disc herniation. It’s not that big a deal. Document the plan with the OB and proceed. But then again I did thousands of epidurals without image guidance over the years.
technically, TENS is "contraindicated" in pregnancy...
I like TENS and there are guidelines for safety.
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/70ce/3a430f2e721bfc10e0f44d77264a1eb336aa.pdf
Pregnancy And Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation
It can be scary to use anything new or unknown to you during pregnancy, and while the TENS unit should NEVER be used by a pregnant woman before labor, during labor it can help to relieve some of the pain caused by contractions. There have been various studies done on this subject to certify whether or not transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation is safe for a growing fetus. The findings have made it clear that while the baby is growing in utero it shouldn’t be used to ease back pain or discomfort, but once a woman goes into labor and pain becomes increasingly severe, TENS can be used safely with no harm to the child.
I’ve seen landmark based ESI done for severe, disabling radiculopathy in pregnancy in fellowship. Obviously need to get clearance from OB and document the hell out of risk/benefit discussion, and be very comfortable doing landmark based interlaminar ESI (i.e. anesthesia-trained).have a consult for this today
normal 30 y/o F new onset acute radic 31 weeks pregnant. what are my options? I wouldn't want to perform the eSI anyways on pregnant patient.
Don't punish her for being pregnant.
You or an anesthesia trained colleague can safely do this without fluoroscopy or with ultrasound.
The harder part is whether it is truly indicated and what the risk actually is for patient/fetus.
Interlaminar w/ nonparticulate +/- low dose lidocaine, no contrast and epi test dose
No meds. No shots. Tough it out. Apparently there have been 10s of thousands of years of women being pregnant and this ist the first case of radic. Bite a rope. I would not offer anything because the risks have not been adequately studied. Some other doc can take those risks on your unborn child.
A PT who specializes in Women's Health might be of help - you can locate on here, or direct the patient to the web site to find their own PT.Tylenol. PT w Mckenzie. Reassurance. Theatrical placebo if they want (acupuncture, Chiro). No esi.
Ur not punishing her. This is an ELECTIVE case.
no shot.
one of my colleagues does it-- under flouro. i think he is out of his mind
It’s the risk benefit analysis that I think you are missing.
ESI - potentially high risk and not just to mom. Short term benefit.
Orbs are sometimes worried about even giving Tylenol to pregnant women. Why risk injection with steroid?
Do this - ask the Ob if they gave patient a course of oral steroids. If they say no, ask why not...
from a TENS company:
Pregnancy And Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation
Safety studies suggest that TENS may not lead to fetal deformity, but like opioids, data limited. Massage, ROM exercise, and focusing on baby shower seem more apropos.
Do agree- safer than opioids.