Sacroiliac Joint J Scott Bainbridge MD www Denver
Sacroiliac Joint J. Scott Bainbridge, MD www. Denver. Back. Pain. Specialists. com
SIJ Background Proposed as potential source of pain by Goldthwaite in 1905 n Incidence of SIJ pain in LBP population: 18 -40% (Schwarzer, Maigne, De. Palma, Liliang, Schofferman) n
SIJ Anatomy
SIJ Anatomy n n n Diarthrodial joint Hyalin cartilage, fibrocartilage also on ilial side Interlocking contours Ligaments: anterior and posterior SIL, interosseous SIL, sacrospinous and sacrotuberous Muscles: paraspinous, gluteal, psoas, iliacus, abdominal, sartorius, rectus femoris, hamstrings, latissimus dorsi (lumbodorsal fascia) Nutation
SIJ Innervation
SIJ Innervation Early: Cunningham’s…, Bernard and Cassidy, Ikeda, Nagakawa, etc. included anterior innervation (ventral rami) n Fortin et al, Grob et al: macroscopic and fetal microscopic fetal studies: innervation entirely dorsal rami (S 1 -3[4]) n Yin, Willard, Carreiro, Dreyfuss: defined (fluoro) course of sacral dorsal rami; reported SIJRF pilot technique and results n
S-1 Dorsal Rami Yin, et al. Spine 2003
S-2 Dorsal Rami
S-3 Dorsal Rami
Diagnosis n n X-ray, MRI, CT, bone scan generally not helpful except to rule in/out fracture, stress response, infection, tumor, sacroiliitis Arthrogram may show capsular disruption Need double intraarticular SIJ blocks to diagnose, although single IA, posterior ligament, or dorsal rami blocks have been used by various authors/practitioners Blockade of the L 5 Dorsal Rami and Sacral 1 -3 lateral branches, using the multi-site, multi-depth technique of Dreyfuss, et al. (Pain Medicine
Diagnosis - History Unilateral pain at or below PSIS, PSIS pointing (Fortin, Maigne) n , no pain above L 5, pain over SIJ and Buttock (Dreyfuss, et al) n
Diagnosis – Physical Exam Maigne: Patrick’s – trend – p=0. 9 n Broadhurst and Bond: double blind, lido v saline n FABER (Flexion, ABduction, External Rotation) n POSH (POsterior SHear) n REAB (REsisted ABduction) n 100% specificity, 77 -80% specificity @ 70% < pain n
Diagnosis – Physical Exam n Dreyfuss, et al (multidisciplinary expert panel) 12 key pain, Hx, and PE parameters n Single block, 90% relief n PSIS pointing, no pain above L 5, sacral sulcus tenderness, pain over SIJ/buttock n Gillet’s test best of provocative maneuvers n
Diagnosis – Physical Exam Van der Wurff, et al, 2006 n Double blocks, >50% relief n 3 of 5 positive tests (distraction, compression, thigh thrust, Patrick, Gaenslen) n Sensitivity. 85, specificity. 79 n PPV. 77, NPV. 87 n
n Discogenic: Centralization w Mc. Kenzie method n n Pain w rising from sitting Sacroiliac: Unilateral pain; No lumbar pain Pain rising from sitting n 3/5 provocation tests: distraction, compression, sacral thrust, thigh thrust, Gaenslen’s n
SIJ - Treatment Manual therapy n Exercise (m. balance, stabilization) n Medication n IA injection (corticosteroids) n Prolotherapy n PRP – Platelet Rich Plasma n Neuromodulation n Dennervation (RF neurotomy) n
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