
Vasopressors Part I: Norepineprhine

Question: Do trigger point injections with lidocaine lead to lowering pain for patients with point tenderness in their neck or back when compared to standard therapies?
Clinical Importance? Musculoskeletal neck and back pain can pose a challenge to treat when patients do not respond to NSAIDs or have a contraindication to NSAID use, and trigger point injections pose a solution to this.
Yanuck et al: This is a single blind, prospective, randomized trial conducted at a single level I academic Emergency Department (n=62) with the goal to assess whether trigger point injection with 1% lidocaine results in decreased pain scores when compared to conventional therapy in the treatment of myofascial pain syndrome of the neck/back. For the primary outcome, the mean difference in NRS score when comparing trigger point to control was reported as a statistically significant different (ANCOVA, F[1,50]=25.97, p<0.001). The length of ED stay was also statistically lower in the trigger point injection group. Finally, trigger point injection patient received less opioid prescriptions compared to standard therapy.
Limitations: not double blinded, study personnel were in room with treating physician while doing injections, variability in competence of treating physicians, no sample size calculated before the study was done, loss of study participants/drop-outs (especially in the control arm), no tests run for normality of data, pain scores reported as means (outliers can significantly affect), “standard therapies” were broad and not clearly discussed or reported, significant amount of opioid prescriptions, convenience sampling limiting generalizability, 20 minute timeline may have favored injections over other therapies, no follow up period after ED, did not discuss adverse events or side effects reported
Kocak et. al: This is a randomized prospective study (n=80) at a single Emergency Department which aimed to compare trigger point injections with 2% lidocaine to IV NSAID (dexketoprofen) in the treatment of lower back pain.The study found a statistically significant difference in pain scores reported by the trigger point injection group and the NSAID group (mean pain score trigger point: 7.55, NSAID 7.22, p<0.05), with a significantly higher response to treatment recorded in the trigger point group, with 21 out of 22 responding to trigger points and only 20 out of 32 responding to NSAIDs (p=0.008)
Limitations: Not blinded, no longer term follow up, no conclusions can be made about side effects/adverse effects, no definition of “experienced and trained professionals”