Differences in pain perception during open muscle biopsy and bergstroem needle muscle biopsy

8Citations
Citations of this article
14Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Purpose: Open surgical muscle biopsy (OB) and percutaneous Bergstroem needle muscle biopsy (NB) are equally accepted procedures. However, there are no data comparing intraprocedural pain for both techniques. We designed this prospective trial to test the hypothesis that the less invasive NB causes less intraprocedural pain than OB. Methods: In a two-center prospective trial, 33 patients underwent both procedures in one session. All patients quantified intraprocedural pain using the numeric rating scale (NRS). Mean NRS values were calculated along with the difference in NRS values (∆NRS) between both types of biopsies. Results: Mean NRS values were 4.5 (±2.7 standard deviation [SD]) for NB and 3.2 (±2.1) for OB (P=0.02). Of the patients, 57.6% described the ∆NRS as ≤2 NRS points. Regarding the pain categories “mild” (NRS 0–3), “moderate” (NRS 4–7), and “severe” (NRS 8–10), no significant difference was observed between NB and OB. Patients who found NB to be more uncomfortable were more likely to quantify the ∆NRS as >2 NRS points than patients finding OB more uncomfortable. Conclusion: Our results do not support the hypothesis that intraprocedural pain in NB is less than in OB. When informing the patient about both types of muscle biopsies, the amount of intraprocedural pain should not serve as a differentiating characteristic.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Dengler, J., Linke, P., Gdynia, H. J., Wolf, S., Ludolph, A. C., Vajkoczy, P., & Meyer, T. (2014). Differences in pain perception during open muscle biopsy and bergstroem needle muscle biopsy. Journal of Pain Research, 7, 645–650. https://doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S69458

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free