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. 2021 Nov 12;22(11):2443–2524. doi: 10.1093/pm/pnab281

Table 12.

Clinical studies evaluating AA joint injections

Author, year Patient population Design Results Comments
Bogduk and Marsland, 1988 [8] 24 consecutive pts who underwent cervical injections for head and neck pain, 4 of whom received AA injections with LA and steroid Retrospective study 1 of 4 (25%) pts obtained pain relief from AA joint injection for 2 months Used a fluoroscopically-guided posterior approach.
Pts had also trialed other cervical injections.
No reported adverse events
Lamer, 1991 [170] 2 pts with cervical spine OA and ear pain provoked with head turning received AA joint injection with LA and steroid Case series Both pts had pain relief following injection Used a fluoroscopically-guided posterior approach.
Injectate volumes not noted.
Duration of pain relief not reported
Chevrot et al 1995 [160] 100 pts (osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylarthritis, and diverse conditions) who received AA joint injections with LA and steroid Retrospective study 18 (60%) of first 30 pts showed clinical improvement (duration of follow-up 6 months to 3 years) Used a fluoroscopically-guided posterior oblique approach.
One accidental vertebral artery puncture without clinically significant sequelae
Glemarac et al 2000 [172] 26 pts with either mechanical (n=16) or inflammatory disorders (n=10) who received AA joint injections with steroid (no LA) Retrospective study 69.3% responder rate with mean pain score reduction of 52.3% and mean duration of pain relief 8.1 months Used a fluoroscopically-guided posterior approach.
Those with inflammatory conditions responded better than those with mechanical disorders. One case of moderately severe hypertension following injection
Aprill et al 2002 [5] 34 pts with occipital pain and clinical features suggestive of AA joint origin received AA injection with LA and steroid Prospective observational study 21 of 34 (62%) pts obtained complete pain relief for at least the duration of action of LA Used a fluoroscopically-guided posterior approach.
Duration of response not assessed. Clinical features did not predict positive response
Narouze et al 2007 [62] 32 pts with clinical features suggestive of AA joint pain who received AA injection with LA and steroid Retrospective study 15 of 32 (47%) pts had complete pain relief for the duration of action of LA, 26 of 32 (81%) had ≥50% improvement sustained at 3 months Used a fluoroscopically-guided posterior approach.
5 of 32 (16%) pts stopped opioid use and 3 of 32 (9%) pts had complete pain relief sustained at 9 months
Zhou et al 2010 [167] 31 pts with suspected cervicogenic headache who received AA joint, C2 and C3 dorsal rami, and C2–3 facet joint injection with LA and steroid Retrospective study 28 of 31 (90%) pts had >50% pain relief with an average duration of 21.7 days Used fluoroscopically-guided posterior approach.
Pts also experienced decreased headache frequency and duration. 3 non-responders diagnosed with temporomandibular disorder (n=2) and migraine (n=1).
Aiudi et al 2017 [163] 72 pts who received AA joint injections with LA and steroid Retrospective study Adverse event rate was 25 of 135 (18.5%) injections with 13 procedural events (vascular uptake/paresthesia) and 12 post-procedural events (increased pain/neurologic symptoms) Used a fluoroscopically-guided posterior approach.
No serious adverse events noted and all post-procedural adverse events resolved within 3 months.
Pain outcomes not reported
Hetta et al 2019 [173] 60 pts with rheumatoid arthritis and AA joint pain received AA joint injection with LA and steroid or LA and saline Randomized controlled LA+steroid injection > LA-only injection through 3-month follow-up for pain and function, with improvement in imaging findings not observed in LA-only group Fluoroscopically-guided
posterior approach.
Permitted continued use of disease-modifying agents and oral NSAIDs for breakthrough pain
Kuklo et al 2006 [169] 14 pts with AA joint pain received AA joint injection ‘via a standard technique’ with LA+steroids – no specifics provided Retrospective 11 of 14 (79%) pts treated ‘successfully’ with 1–4 injections over the study period with significant pain relief. 3 refused injections, 3 had no relief from multiple injections, and 3 had temporary relief from injections and went on to C1–2 fusion surgery No discussion on how ‘significant’ relief was defined

AA, atlanto–axial; LA, local anesthetic; NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; OA, osteoarthritis.