Medical Record, Physical and Neurological Data That Orient to the Diagnosis of Sacroiliac Joint Dysfunction
Datos de la Historia clínica y Del Examen físico y neurológico Que Orientan al diagnóstico de Dolor Originario en la articulación sacroilíaca
University of Valencia
140 participants
Apr 19, 2019
OBSERVATIONAL
Conditions
Summary
There are many patients coming daily to our office with the complaint of chronic lumbosacral pain radiating or not to the legs that need a proper diagnosis before any treatment is decided. The diagnosis, based mostly on radiological exams, carries a risk of failure to diagnose the sacroiliac joint as the cause of the pain. The study proposes that a quick interrogatory followed by a physical exam with the adequate provocative testing can raise the suspicion of the diagnosis that the pain is originating from the sacroiliac joint. Thereafter, a diagnostic sacroiliac joint block can be performed. The study aims to correlate findings from patient history and physical examination with eventual diagnosis.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria1
- Patient being evaluated in clinic for chronic low back or buttocks pain with or without radiation to the legs
Exclusion Criteria3
- Patient has already undergone surgery for the condition of interest
- Inflammatory condition
- Active cancer
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Interventions
Medical history-taking, physical examination with provocative maneuvers, radiographic imaging (if relevant), and sacroiliac joint block (if indicated), facet joint block (if indicated)
Locations(1)
View Full Details on ClinicalTrials.gov
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NCT04381208