Seventy-three patients with lumbar radicular pain syndromes were treated
in a prospective, randomized, double-blind fashion with either seven
milliliters of methylprednisolone acetate and procaine or seven milliliters
of physiological saline solution and procaine. All patients had
radiographic confirmation of lumbar nerve-root compression, consistent with
the clinical diagnosis of either an acute herniated nucleus pulposus or
spinal stenosis. No statistically significant difference was observed
between the control and experimental patients with either acute disc
herniation or spinal stenosis. Long-term follow-up, averaging twenty
months, failed to demonstrate the efficacy of a second injection of
epidural steroids administered to the patients whose pain did not respond
within twenty-four hours to an injection of either eighty milligrams of
methylprednisolone acetate combined with five milliliters of 1 per cent
procaine or two milliliters of sterile saline combined with five
milliliters of 1 per cent procaine. Therefore, a decision to use epidural
steroids must be made with the realization that we failed to demonstrate
its clinical efficacy in this study and that reports of serious
complications of this procedure have been published.