Can the Cervical Facet Joints Generate Pain?
To define the particular generation of pain by these joints, Dwyer, Aprill, and Bogduk
(1990) injected those of 5 volunteers with radiographic contrast solution. The referred pain from each joint varied little among the subjects. For the C2-3 joint it was from the lower occiput to the 3rd spinous process. For the C6-7 joint it was from the lower postrolateral neck to the lower scapula. The intermediate joints gave distributions between these two. The pain was always limited to the side injected.
Are the Cervical Facet Joints the Source of the Neck/Head Pain in Chronic "Whiplash" Syndrome?
Anesthetic Blockades of Cervical Nerves and Joints
In an early approach to this question, Bogduk & Marsland (1986) blocked the third occipital nerve (supplies the C2-3 facet joint) with a local-anesthetic in 10 consecutive patients with chronic, continuous "occipital or suboccipital headache," of which 3 were sequelae of motor-vehicle accidents (MVAs). 7 of the 10 patients, including the 3 with MVAs, had complete pain relief for the duration of the anesthetic's action, but no relief from injections of other nerves. Radiographs showed no arthropathy of the C2-3 joints. Nevertheless, the authors favored "traumatic arthropathy or degenerative joint disease" as the "causative pathology."
Barnsley, Lord, & Bogduk
"explored the utility of comparative local anaesthetic blocks in the diagnosis of neck pain stemming from the cervical zygapophyseal joints." 47 patients with "chronic neck pain following whiplash injury" attributed to a motor-vehicle accident were studied. The initial joint blocked for each patient was that which best fit the patient's pain location, according to previously determined pain distribution patterns. The initial block was with either short-acting lignocaine (lidocaine) or long-acting bupivacaine, chosen randomly and blinded to injector and patient. When definite or complete loss of pain was produced by a block, the same joint was blocked by the other anesthetic two or more weeks later. When the initial block was negative, the next joint most consistent with the patient's pain distribution was blocked. The assumption was that only patients with genuine joint pain would have longer pain relief from bupivacaine than lignocaine.
44 of the 47 patients had two positive blocks at a single joint, and 34 of these patients had longer relief with bupivacaine. Because this difference was unlikely to have been due to chance, the authors concluded that their comparative blocks identified true zygapohyseal joint pain in these 34 patients. No clinical details of the patients' pain were given and headache was not mentioned.
In 1995, Barnsley, Lord, Wallis, and Bogduk followed the above report with a study of the prevalence of "chronic cervical zygapophyseal joint pain" in patients with "chronic neck pain after whiplash injury." They did the same comparative blocks as before. 38 of the 50 selected patients completed the investigation. Curiously, the listed duration of the neck pain was identical to that in the above study: a mean of "54 months." Moreover, the radiographic reproduction of needles placed for an anesthetic injection was the same in this paper as in the preceding one.
They concluded that of the 38 patients who completed the study, "27 unequivocally met the predetermined criteria for cervical zygapophyseal joint pain." These were that complete pain relief would occur when the joint was blocked with both lignocaine and bupivacaine, and that it would last longer after the latter. 12 of the 27 patients met these criteria from blockage of the third occipital nerve.
Lord, Barnsley, Wallis, and Bogduk (1994)
did a more extensive investigation of blocking the 3rd occipital nerve in patients referred for the study and therapy of "neck pain after whiplash injury" (see Bogduk & Marsland, 1986, above). 29 of 100 consecutive referrals were not included in the study, because they lacked headache (they were investigating "third occipital nerve headache"). 16 others withdrew for various reasons, leaving 55 investigated patients. They were injected with the same two anesthetics used in prior studies during two different sessions at the site of one 3rd occipital nerve. Pain relief lasted longer after the bupivacaine than after the lignocaine blocks in 27 of the 55 patients. The authors interpreted this pattern of relief to mean that the 3rd occipital nerve was the source of painful impulses responsible for the patients' headaches.
Curiously, "there were no notable differences between those patients who responded to 3rd occipital nerve blocks and those who did not, with respect to demographic features, psychological profiles, mode of accident, and the duration, frequency, severity, and quality of their pain." However, a much higher percentage of responders had headache that overshadowed their neck pain and had tenderness over the C2-3 joint. 14 of 25 patients whose pain was unaffected by blocking the 3rd occipital nerve got pain relief from blocks of lower zygapophyseal joints.
The authors provided no details on the patients' headaches or neck pain. They did not say whether pain was unilateral or bilateral.
The authors stated that the mechanism of third occipital nerve headache has not been determined, but favored pain originating from injured zygaphophyseal joints (the study did not include CT or MR scans of the joints).
Anesthetic vs. Corticosteroid Injections of Cervical Zygapophyseal Joints
Barnsley, Lord, Wallis, and Bogduk (1994) injected either a depot corticosteroid (betamethasone) or a local anesthetic (bupivacaine) into a single cervical zygapophyseal joint identified as a source of pain by differential nerve blocks in patients referred to their unit for chronic neck pain "attributed to a motor-vehicle accident." 21 patients received the corticosteroid and 20 the anesthetic. The result was that the two groups did not differ significantly in duration of pain relief. "In over half the patients, neither treatment provided relief of pain for more than a week..." Thus, the authors counseled against using intra-articular steroid injections for "cervical zygapophyseal joint pain after a whiplash injury."
As in the above studies, no information on the features of the patients' pain is given and "headache" is not mentioned. The authors thought that a placebo response was an unlikely explanation for the instances of long-lasting relief from either agent. They suggested that the relief obtained from either injection substance may have been from "stretching of the joint capsule."
Radio-frequency Neurotomy Therapy
Two years after the above report of the therapeutic ineffectiveness of facet-joint steroid injections,
Lord, Barnsley, Wallis, McDonald, & Bogduk (1996) reported that percutaneous radio-frequency neurotomy of the nerves supplying the "painful joint" (quotes are mine) can give long-lasting relief from chronic neck pain following whiplash injury. Of 54 screened patients, 24 met the criteria for inclusion in the study, by reporting longer pain relief after blocks of a facet joint with long-acting bupivacaine than with short-acting lidocaine and no relief from saline injections. "In 17 patients the neck pain was predominantly unilateral, stemming from one zygapophyseal joint; the other 7...had more than one source of pain." The treated joints were from C3-4 through C6-7. 12 patients received a radio-frequency neurotomy (the nerves to the joint were denatured) and 12 others (the controls) had needle placement without activation of the denaturing current. The operator was blinded to these two procedural differences and patients were blinded by regional anesthesia which blocked sensations of heat or pain during the radio-frequency denaturation of the nerves.
RESULTS: "By 27 weeks, 1 patient in the control group and 7 in the active-treatment group remained free of pain."
In the accompanying editorial, North
dissented from the authors' belief that temporary relief of pain after blocking nerves with local anesthetics or denaturing them with radio-frequency unequivocally identifies the source of the pain (attributed to the facet joints in this and the prior studies of this Australian group). His opinion was based in part on his work