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Surgical Management of Occipital Neuralgia: A Systematic Review of the Literature. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Occipital neuralgia (ON) is a headache disorder marked by intense, stabbing pain in areas controlled by specific occipital nerves, with both medical and surgical treatment options available.
  • A systematic review of 22 studies on surgical treatments revealed that they mainly assessed patient-reported pain levels, but many studies had issues with bias in their findings.
  • The review suggests that while greater occipital nerve decompression may help patients who don't respond to medication, more rigorous research is needed to confirm its effectiveness.

Article Abstract

Background: Occipital neuralgia (ON) is a primary headache disorder characterized by severe, paroxysmal, shooting or stabbing pain in the distribution of the greater occipital, lesser occipital, and/or third occipital nerves. Both medical and surgical options exist for treating headaches related to ON. The purposes of this study are to summarize the current state of surgical ON management through a systematic review of the literature and, in doing so, objectively identify future directions of investigation.

Methods: We performed a systematic review of primary literature on surgical management for ON of at least level IV evidence. Included studies were analyzed for level of evidence, therapeutic intervention, study design, sample size, follow-up duration, outcomes measured, results, and risk of bias.

Results: Twenty-two studies met the inclusion criteria. All 22 studies used patient-reported pain scores as an outcome metric. Other outcome metrics included complication rates (7 studies; 32%), patient satisfaction (7 studies; 32%), quality of life (7 studies; 18%), and analgesic usage (3 studies; 14%). Using the ROBINS-I tool for risk of bias in nonrandomized studies, 7 studies (32%) were found to be at critical risk of bias, whereas the remaining 15 studies (68%) were found to be at serious risk of bias.

Conclusions: Greater occipital nerve decompression seems to be a useful treatment modality for medically refractory ON, but further prospective, randomized data are required.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SAP.0000000000002766DOI Listing

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