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. 2021 Oct 16;13(10):460–472. doi: 10.4253/wjge.v13.i10.460

Table 2.

Endosonography-guided celiac plexus neurolysis efficacy in current literature

Ref.
Design
n
Technique
Neurolytic agent
Pain control (follow up)
Complications
Wiersema et al[6] Retrospective 30 Bilateral 3 mL bupivacaine (0.25%) + 10 mL ethanol (98%) 88% (10 wk) Diarrhea 13.3%, Pain 3.3%
Gunaratnam et al[17] Prospective 58 Bilateral 3-6 mL bupivacaine (0.25%) + 10 mL ethanol (98%) 78% (24 wk) Pain 8.6%
Levy et al[11] Retrospective 17 Direct 8 mL bupivacaine (0.25%) + 12 mL ethanol (99%) 94% (2-4 wk) Hypotension 35%, pain 41% and diarrhea 16%
Sahai et al[9] Prospective 160 Central vs Bilateral 10 mL bupivacaine (0.5%) + 20 mL ethanol 45.9% vs 70.5% (7 d). P < 0.05 Bleeding 0.7%
Sakamoto et al[18] Retrospective 67 Broad vs bilateral 3 mL lidocaine (1%) + 9 mL ethanol (98%) Mean VAS scores 3.9 vs 2.5 (7 d) and 4.8 vs a 3.4 (30 d) P < 0.05 None
Wyse et al[7] RCT 48 Bilateral vs analgesia 10 mL bupivacaine (0.50%) + 20 mL ethanol Likert scale reduction 28% (4 wk) + 60% (12 wk) P < 0.05 None
LeBlanc et al[10] RCT 50 Central vs bilateral 20 mL lidocaine (0.75%) + 10 mL ethanol (98%) 69% vs 81% (61.9%)(14wk) Hypotension 2% pain 36%
Iwata et al[19] Retrospective 47 Central, direct or bilateral 2-3 mL bupivacaine + 20 mL ethanol 68% (7 wk) Hypotension 17%, diarrhea 23% and inebriation 8%
Ascunce et al[20] Retrospective 64 Bilateral 10 mL lidocaine (1%) + 20 mL ethanol (98%) 50% (1 wk). OR 15.61 of response if celiac ganglia was detected Hypotension 2%, pain 2% and diarrhea 23%
Wiechowska-Kozłowska et al[12] Retrospective 29 Central vs bilateral 2 mL lidocaine (2%) + 20 mL ethanol (98%) 86% (1-2 wk) Hypotonia 3.4%, pain 6.9% and diarrhea 10.3%
Téllez-Ávila et al[21] Retrospective 53 Central vs bilateral 10 mL lidocaine (1%) + 10-20 mL ethanol (98%) 48% vs 56% (4 wk) Transitory pain 0% vs 3%
Seicean et al[22] Retrospective 32 Central 10 mL lidocaine (1%) + 10-15 mL ethanol 75% (2 wk) None
Doi et al[13] RCT 68 Direct vs central 1-2 mL bupivacaine (0.25%-0.5%) + 10-20 mL ethanol 73.5% vs 45.5% (7 d) P < 0.05 Hypotension 2.9% vs 6%, pain 29.4% vs 21.2% and diarrhea 5.9% vs 9.1%. No diferences
Ishiwatari et al[16] Retrospective 22 Direct or bilateral 1-2 mL bupivacaine (0.5%) + 40-60 mL ethanol or 20-25 mL fenol 83% (fenol) vs 69% (ethanol) (7 d) Diarrhea 9%, hypotension 4.5%, pain 4.5% and inebriation 4.5%
Hao et al[23] Retrospective 41 Central or direct 10 mL bupivacaine (2%) + 20 mL ethanol Pain < 3 mo improve 84% (3 d), 96% (7 d) and 68% (90 d). Pain > 3 mo improve 75% (3 d), 81% (7 d) and 50% (90 d) Hypotension 4.9%
Minaga et al[14] Retrospective observational 112 Broad ± direct 3 mL lidocaine (1%) + 9 mL ethanol (98%) Pain improvement 77. 7% (1 wk)+ 67.9% (4 wk) Inebriation 8%, hypotension 4.5%, pain 3.6% and diarrhea 3.6%
Levy et al[24] RCT 110 Direct vs bilateral 4 mL bupivacaine (0.25%) + 20 mL ethanol (99%) Pain improvement 46.2% vs 40.4%. No changes on quality of life Hypotension 11.7% vs 20%, diarrhea 10% vs 12.2%. Pain 8.3% vs 44.9% (P < 0.05)

VAS: Visual analogue scale. RCT: Randomized clinical trial.