Publication

Analysis of disk volume before and after CT-guided intradiscal and periganglionic ozone-oxygen injection for the treatment of lumbar disk herniation

Journal Paper/Review - Sep 20, 2012

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Lehnert T, Naguib N, Wutzler S, Nour-Eldin N, Bauer R, Kerl J, Vogl T, Balzer J. Analysis of disk volume before and after CT-guided intradiscal and periganglionic ozone-oxygen injection for the treatment of lumbar disk herniation. J Vasc Interv Radiol 2012; 23:1430-6.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
J Vasc Interv Radiol 2012; 23
Publication Date
Sep 20, 2012
Issn Electronic
1535-7732
Pages
1430-6
Brief description/objective

PURPOSE
To quantify the change in volume in herniated lumbar disk after computed tomography (CT)-guided intradiscal and periganglionic ozone-oxygen injection and to assess the effects of patient age, sex, and initial disk volume on disk volume changes.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
A total of 283 patients with lumbar radiculopathy received a single intradiscal (3 mL) and periganglionic (7 mL) injection of an ozone-oxygen mixture (ratio, 3:97; ozone concentration, 30 μg/mL). Under CT guidance, intradiscal and periganglionic injection was performed through an extraspinal lateral approach with a 22-gauge spinal needle. All disk volume changes were evaluated on CT 6 months after the procedure in all patients.

RESULTS
Initial mean disk volume was 17.37 cm(3) ± 4.70 (standard deviation; range, 8.12-29.15 cm(3)). Disk volume reduction (mean, 7.70% ± 5.45; range, 0.29%-22.31%) was seen in 96.1% of treated disks (n = 272) at 6 months after treatment and was found to be statistically significant (P < .0001). In 3.9% of patients (n = 11), disk volume increased (mean, 0.59% ± 0.24; range, 0.11%-0.81%). Patient age correlated negatively with disk volume reduction (r = -0.505; P < .0001) at 6 months after treatment, whereas initial disk volume correlated positively with volume reduction (r = 0.225; P = .00014) after therapy. No correlation was noted between patient sex and disk volume reduction after treatment (P = .09).

CONCLUSIONS
Intradiscal administration of medical ozone is associated with a statistically significant volume reduction of the herniated lumbar disk. The volume-reduction effect of ozone correlates negatively with the patient's age and positively with initial disk volume.