Coccygodynia is a disabling pain in the coccyx exacerbated by sitting or rising from sitting. The pain is often pulling or lancinating in quality, may radiate to the sacrum or buttock, and may coexist with lower back pain. Contributing of many physiologic and psychological factors to its etiology, it may be traumatic or idiopathic in origin. Many risk factors are known such as trauma, female gender and obesity. Despite the identification of chronic coccygeal pain hundreds of years ago, its treatment can be difficult and sometimes controversial because of the multifactorial nature of coccygeal pain. Most cases of coccygodynia resolve within weeks to months with or without conservative treatment, but for a few patients, the pain can become chronic and debilitating. First-line treatment options include analgesic drugs, cushion, sit baths, and manuel therapy. Interventional procedures for pain management can be applied to patients who have no response to other conservative modalities. Ganglion impar block and caudal epidural steroid injection are two treatment options for chronic coccygodynia and both of them can be applied by guidance of fluoroscopy and ultrasonography. Radiofrequency ablation is the other option for treatment and eventually, surgical intervention can be done for patients who have refractory pain despite other treatments. Although efficacy of two interventional procedure for chronic coccygodynia, ganglion impar block and caudal epidural steroid injection, has been well known, no study is exist comparing the efficacy of them. We aimed to compare the efficacy of ganglion impar block and caudal epidural steroid injection in chronic coccygodynia.
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Change in pain severity of patients from baseline to each checkpoints
Timeframe: from pre-interventional time to post-interventional 1st hour, 3rd week, 3rd month