| Literature DB >> 26266421 |
Andrea Santamato1, Maria Francesca Micello2, Giovanni Valeno3, Raffaele Beatrice4, Nicoletta Cinone5, Alessio Baricich6, Alessandro Picelli7, Francesco Panza8,9,10, Giancarlo Logroscino11,12, Pietro Fiore13, Maurizio Ranieri14.
Abstract
Piriformis muscle syndrome (PMS) is caused by prolonged or excessive contraction of the piriformis muscle associated with pain in the buttocks, hips, and lower limbs because of the close proximity to the sciatic nerve. Botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A) reduces muscle hypertonia as well as muscle contracture and pain inhibiting substance P release and other inflammatory factors. BoNT-A injection technique is important considering the difficult access of the needle for deep location, the small size of the muscle, and the proximity to neurovascular structures. Ultrasound guidance is easy to use and painless and several studies describe its use during BoNT-A administration in PMS. In the present review article, we briefly updated current knowledge regarding the BoNT therapy of PMS, describing also a case report in which this syndrome was treated with an ultrasound-guided injection of incobotulinumtoxin A. Pain reduction with an increase of hip articular range of motion in this patient with PMS confirmed the effectiveness of BoNT-A injection for the management of this syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: botulinum toxin type A; piriformis muscle syndrome; ultrasound guide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26266421 PMCID: PMC4549739 DOI: 10.3390/toxins7083045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Key and reviewed studies on the employment of botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A) and type B (BoNT-B) therapy in the treatment of piriformis muscle syndrome (PMS).
| First author and year of publication | Study design | Number of patients with PMS | Doses (U) and number of injections | Injection guide | Outcome measures | Adjunctive therapy | Clinical results/adverse effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fanucci | Prospective | 30 | OnabotulinumtoxinA 100 U: 26 received one injections 4 received two injections | CT | Not specific pain score | Not indicated | Reduction of pain intensity after 5–7 days for 26 subjects; other 4 subjects reported a complete pain reduction in the following week/No adverse effects |
| Fishman | RCT double-blind, parallel | 21 | AbobotulinumtoxinA 200 U | EMG | VAS | Twice-weekly physical therapy program | 65% of the patients reported a 50% of pain reduction/No adverse effects |
| Childers | RCT double-blind, crossover | 9 | OnabotulinumtoxinA 100 U | FL EMG | VAS | Not indicated | Reduction of pain intensity, distress, spasm and interference with activities respect to baseline/No adverse effects |
| Fishman | Prospective | 27 | BoNT-B 12,500 U | EMG | VAS | Physical therapy twice weekly for 3 months | A total of 24 of 27 study patients had a pain relief of 50%. The most severe adverse effects were dry mouth and dysphagia, approaching 50% of patients at 2 and 4 weeks |
| Lang | Prospective | 20 | BoNT-B 5,000 U | EMG | VAS | Dry mouth was reported in 6 of 20 patients | Reduction of myofascial buttock and hip pain associated with PMS/No adverse effects |
| Yoon | Prospective | 20 | AbobotulinumtoxinA 150 U: One injection | CT | NRS at 4, 8, 12 weeks Korean SF-36 | Stretching exercise 20 times/day for 12 week | Pain reduction respect to baseline( |
| Michel | Prospective | 122 | OnabotulinumtoxinA Ranged between 50 and 100 U: 51 received one Injection; 43 received two injections; 18 received three injections; 9 received four injections; 1 received five injections | EMG | VAS | Not indicated | “Very good’ or ‘Good” in 77% of the cases “Average” in 7.4% of the cases “Poor” in 15.6% of the cases/No adverse effects |
| Fabregat | Feasibility study | 10 | OnabotulinumtoxinA 100 U | US | Not indicated | Not indicated | No adverse effects during the BoNT-A injections |
| Al-Al-Shaikh | Retrospective | 12 | OnabotulinumtoxinA 100 U | US CT | VAS | Not indicated | Buttock and sciatic pain reduction respect to baseline ( |
CT: Computed Tomography; RCT: Randomized Clinical Trial; EMG: Electromyography; VAS: Visual Analogue Scale; FL: Fluoroscopy; NRS: Numeric Rating Scale; SF-36: 36-Item Short Form Health Survey; US: Ultrasound.
Figure 1Positioning of the probe initially with its lateral side medial to the greater trochanter (a) and finally positioned with its medial side lateral to the ischial tuberosity (b).
Figure 2Ultrasound identification of the piriformis muscle between gluteus maximus muscle and ischial spine.