Clinical Data

Editorial: Awareness of MIS SI Joint Fusion (Vanaclocha - J Spine Surg 2019)

Sacroiliac joint pain: is the medical world aware enough of its existence? Why not considering sacroiliac joint fusion in the recalcitrant cases?

Vanaclocha-Vanaclocha V, Sáiz-Sapena N, Vanaclocha L.
J Spine Surg. 2019;5(3):384-386.
DOI: 10.21037/jss.2019.06.11. PMCID: 6787371

ABSTRACT

Sacroiliac joint (SIJ) pain is a common contributor to low back pain, present in 10–30% of patients with chronic low back pain (1-5). SIJ pain impairs quality of life similarly to other spine conditions (6,7). Non-surgical treatments, such as physical therapy, chiropractic, intraarticular SIJ steroid injections and prolotherapy have minimal evidentiary support. Two small trials of periarticular corticosteroids (8,9) and radiofrequency neurotomy of sacral nerve root branches (10,11) suggest short-term therapeutic benefit. No published high-quality studies support long-term effectiveness of any non-surgical treatment for SIJ pain.

Author information

Vanaclocha-Vanaclocha - Department of Neurosurgery, Hospital 9 de Octubre, Valencia, Spain.

Sáiz-Sapena N - Department of Anesthesiology, Hospital 9 de Octubre, Valencia, Spain.

Vanaclocha L - Medical School, University College London, London, UK.

3,700+Treating Surgeons

100,000+iFuse Procedures Performed

130+iFuse Publications

Looking for Answers?

We can help. Tell us what you're looking for below.