Current Issue - July 2022 - Vol 25 Issue 4

Abstract

PDF
  1. 2022;25;E503-E521Superior and Middle Cluneal Nerve Entrapment: A Cause of Low Back and Radicular Pain
    Scoping Review
    Andrea M. Trescot, MD, Standiford Helm, MD, and Helen W. Karl, MD.

BACKGROUND: The superior and middle cluneal nerves are sources of low back, buttock, and leg pain. These nerves are cutaneous branches of the lateral branches of the dorsal rami of T11- S4. Pain arising from entrapment or dysfunction of one or more of these nerves is called “cluneal nerve syndrome.” A clear understanding of the anatomy underlying cluneal nerve syndrome and its treatment has been hampered by the very small size of the cluneal nerves and their complex, varying anatomy. Because of differing methods and foci of investigation, the literature regarding cluneal nerves has been confusing and even contradictory.

OBJECTIVES: This paper provides a thorough critical literature review of cluneal nerve anatomy and implications for therapy.

STUDY DESIGN: A modified scoping review.

METHODS: The bibliographic trail of English language papers on the anatomy and treatment of cluneal nerve syndrome was used to resolve the contradictions that have appeared in some of the anatomic descriptions and, where applicable, to examine their implications for therapy.

RESULTS: Recent anatomic and surgical investigations confirm a wider than previously realized range of central nervous system origins of these peripheral nerves, explaining why cluneal nerve dysfunction can cause a wide array of symptoms, including low back, buttock, and/or leg pain or “pseudosciatica.”

CONCLUSIONS: Cluneal nerve syndrome is characterized by a triad of pain, tender points, and relief with local anesthetic injections. The pain is a deep, aching, poorly localized low back pain with variable involvement of the buttocks and/or legs. Tender points are localized at the iliac crest or caudal to the posterior superior iliac spine. Muscle weakness and dermatomal sensory changes are absent in cluneal nerve syndrome. If the pain returns after injections, neuroablation, nerve stimulation, or surgical release may be needed.

KEY WORDS: Low back pain, buttock pain, leg pain, superior cluneal nerves, middle cluneal nerves, entrapment neuropathy, pseudosciatica

PDF