(Press-News.org) Contact information: Kara Spak
kspak@nmh.org
312-926-0755
Northwestern Memorial Hospital
Research finds severe hot flashes reduced with quick neck injection
A shot in the neck of local anesthesia may reduce hot flashes by as much as 50 percent for at least six months, a recent Northwestern Medicine® study found.
"We think we are resetting the thermostat in women who are experiencing moderate to very severe hot flashes without using hormonal therapies," said David Walega, MD, chief of the Division of Pain Medicine at Northwestern Memorial Hospital andNorthwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. Walega presented the results of the initial study at a recent American Society of Anesthesiologists annual meeting.
Forty women between 35 and 65 years old experiencing natural or induced menopause participated in the study. The women suffered debilitating hot flashes with more severe symptoms than the typical hot flash.
"Many of the women in our study experienced repeated drenching sweats that lessen the ability to go about a day-to-day routine, including interfering with their professional lives," said Walega. " We wanted to see if this injection could provide symptom relief without hormones, as hormone therapy has been associated with an increased risk of cancer, stroke and heart disease, and there are few other viable treatment options available right now."
To administer the treatment, the doctor used low dose X-ray to guide an injection of bupivacaine hydrochloride, a commonly used local anesthetic, into a nerve bundle called the stellate ganglion, located in the neck near the "voice box." It's a 30 second procedure that must be done by a trained physician because the injection is close to important structures like the carotid artery, the vertebral artery and the spinal nerves. Injecting any of those areas could cause a seizure, loss of consciousness or other complications.
The idea came from a pain study published in 2007 in the medical journal "The Lancet," where stellate ganglion injections were performed to try to alleviate pain. In some cases, hot flashes dissipated after the injection, independent of pain relief, leading Walega's research team to wonder if this might be a safe, effective way of treating hot flashes from menopause.
Walega's patients tracked their hot flashes for two weeks before and six months after the injection. Half the group got the anesthetic; the other a placebo injection of saline, or salt-water. Those who received the anesthetic medication reported a reduction of hot flashes by a half. The benefits lasted at least six months.
Walega is now planning a larger study to further investigate the shot's effectiveness.
INFORMATION: END
Magnetic 'force field' shields giant gas cloud during collision with Milky Way
Doom may be averted for the Smith Cloud, a gigantic streamer of hydrogen gas that is on a collision course with the Milky Way Galaxy. Astronomers using the National Science ...
US policy should encourage highly skilled, foreign Ph.D. students to stay, CU-led study finds
Attracting more talented foreign students to study at U.S. universities and encouraging them to launch entrepreneurial ventures here could help "revitalize ...
Knowing who their physician is boosts patient satisfaction
Knowing who your doctor is — and a couple of facts about that person — may go a long way toward improving patient satisfaction, according to a Vanderbilt study in the Journal of ...
Results of the FREEDOM sub study reported at TCT 2013
Study examines the impact of insulin treatment status in diabetic patients with multivessel coronary artery disease
SAN FRANCISCO, CA – October 31, 2013 – According to a recent study of diabetic patients who underwent ...
Largest ever study of male breast cancer treatment shows more mastectomy, less radiation than in female disease
University of Colorado Cancer Center researchers used data from 4,276 cases of male breast cancer and 718,587 cases of female breast cancer to show that ...
Results of the HYBRID trial presented at TCT 2013
'Hybrid procedure' combining minimally invasive corornary artery bypass surgery (CABG) with percutaneous coronary intervention is feasible and safe compared with traditional CABG
SAN FRANCISCO, CA – October 31, 2013 – A ...
Results of the TRANSLATE-POPS trial presented at TCT 2013
New study evaluates outcomes of providing access to platelet function testing in a clinical setting
SAN FRANCISCO, CA – October 31, 2013 – According to a new study of heart attack patients treated with percutaneous ...
New methods improve quagga and zebra mussel identification
Reports identify new sampling and testing methods that improve accuracy in the detection of quagga and zebra mussels and outline procedures used to test for them
DENVER - The earliest possible detection of quagga ...
Can putting your child before yourself make you a happier person?
Study explores the correlation between child-centric behavior and parental happiness and fulfillment
Los Angeles, CA (October 31, 2013) While popular media often depicts highly-involved parents ...
US preterm birth rate drops to 15-year low
US earns a 'C' on the 2013 March of Dimes Premature Birth Report Card
Six states – Alaska, California, Maine, New Hampshire, Oregon and Vermont – earned an "A" on the March of Dimes 2013 Premature Birth Report ...