Comparison of the clinical efficacy of ultrasound-guided GON blockade using low and high concentrations of bupivacaine in chronic migraine
Ümit Murat PARPUCU, Onur KÜÇÜK, Fatih SAĞ, Suna Akın TAKMAZ, Barış KIRAN, İsmail Eren DURMUŞ, Yılmaz KARADUMAN, Semih AYDEMİR

TL;DR
This study compared low and high concentrations of bupivacaine for occipital nerve blocks in chronic migraine patients and found similar long-term effectiveness.
Contribution
Demonstrates that a lower concentration of bupivacaine achieves similar outcomes to the standard concentration in GON blocks for chronic migraine.
Findings
No statistical difference in pain outcomes between 0.3% and 0.5% bupivacaine at 3 months postblock.
Both groups showed significant reductions in pain days and intensity after treatment.
Lower bupivacaine concentration may reduce risks without compromising effectiveness.
Abstract
In this study, it was aimed to retrospectively compare the effect of greater occipital nerve (GON) block performed with ultrasonography using low (0.3%) and high (0.5%) concentrations of bupivacaine on pain scores and patient satisfaction in chronic migraine (CM). The mean number of days with pain, the mean duration of pain in the attacks, and the highest numerical rating scale (NRS) scores recorded in the 1 month preblock and 1 and 3 months postblock of 80 patients (40 for Group 1, 0.3% bupivacaine; 40 for Group 2, 0.5% bupivacaine) who underwent ultrasonography-guided GON block were recorded from the patient file data. According to the protocol applied by our clinic, GON block was applied to each patient 6 times with the same procedures, in total. While there was a statistically significant difference between the groups in terms of the number of days with pain and the maximum NRS…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMigraine and Headache Studies · Sympathectomy and Hyperhidrosis Treatments · Trigeminal Neuralgia and Treatments
