Phrenic Nerve Infiltration in Neck Pain (PAINOMICS)
Chronic Neck Pain
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Chronic Neck Pain focused on measuring phrenic nerve, anesthesia, local
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Over 18 and under 64 years old Patients attending to the physician or physical therapist with a main complaint of neck pain Presentation of any peridiaphragmatic visceral disorder. That the subject agrees to participate in the project by signing the informed consent. Exclusion Criteria: Illness of neurological, traumatic, oncological, infectious or rheumatic (fibromyalgia, ankylosing spondylitis...) origin. Uncooperative subject. Severe psychiatric illness. Loss of Cognitive Ability. Contraindication to infiltration of the phrenic nerve. History of head, spinal or upper limb surgery History of infiltration for the neck pain in the previous 3 months History of physical therapy for the neck pain in the previous 30 days
Sites / Locations
- Nacho Navarro FisioterapiaRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Placebo Comparator
Phrenic nerve anesthetics infiltration
Physiological serum infiltration
The experimental intervention will consist of ultrasound-guided anesthetic blockade of the phrenic nerve at the laterocervical supraclavicular level with 1 ml of lidocaine without vasoconstrictor 2% to infiltrate the skin and 3ml of bupivacaine without vasoconstrictor 0.25% for neural blockade, making the local anesthetic surround the nerve between the anterior scalene muscle and the sternocleidomastoid muscle.
The placebo intervention will be similar in relation to 2% lidocaine without vasoconstrictor for the skin, but an ultrasound-guided puncture will be performed at the level of the subcutaneous cellular tissue by injecting 3 ml of physiological saline.