# Efficacy of continuous epidural anesthetics and steroids infusion for management of acute herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia: a retrospective study

**Authors:** Xinyu Dou, Xinghai Guan, Chen Li, Wangjun Qin, Yi Zhang, Yifan Li, Bingyu Han, Chenglong Wu, Yangyang Chen, Li Wang, Peng Mao, Ling Zhou, Bifa Fan

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2025.1600592 · 2025-06-09

## TL;DR

A study found that continuous epidural infusion of anesthetics and steroids improved treatment of acute herpes zoster and reduced postherpetic neuralgia compared to oral medication.

## Contribution

The study introduces continuous epidural infusion as a novel treatment for acute herpes zoster and PHN prevention.

## Key findings

- Epidural infusion improved skin lesion recovery and rash elimination compared to oral medication.
- Pain scores were consistently lower in the epidural infusion group over 3 months.
- Epidural infusion reduced PHN incidence and increased complete remission rates.

## Abstract

Herpes zoster (HZ), caused by the reactivation of the varicella-zoster virus, frequently leads to postherpetic neuralgia (PHN), a debilitating neuropathic pain condition. Current treatments for acute HZ and PHN prevention remain suboptimal. This study evaluates the efficacy of continuous epidural infusion of anesthetics and steroids combined with conventional oral medication management (epidural infusion group) vs. conventional oral medication management (contrast group) alone in managing acute HZ and reducing PHN incidence.

A retrospective analysis included 173 acute HZ patients [numerical rating scale (NRS) score ≥4] treated with epidural infusion group (n = 89) or contrast group (acyclovir, mecobalamin, and vitamin B1; n = 84). Epidural infusion group combined lidocaine (0.25%−0.5%, 0.5 ml/h) and betamethasone (0.3 ml/day) administered via epidural catheter for 3 days. Outcomes assessed skin lesion recovery, pain relief (NRS scores), PHN incidence, complications, and patient satisfaction over 3 months.

Epidural infusion group significantly improved skin lesion recovery (88.43 vs. 79.33% at 1 month, P < 0.001) and rash elimination (98.76 vs. 96.67% at 1 month, P = 0.039). Pain scores were lower in the epidural infusion group at all follow-ups (3 days to 3 months, P < 0.05). PHN incidence at 3 months was reduced with epidural infusion group (11.2 vs. 23.8%, P = 0.028), with higher complete remission rates (82.0 vs. 61.9%, P = 0.003). Complication rates were comparable between groups (P > 0.05), and patient satisfaction scores favored epidural infusion group (3.68 ± 1.01 vs. 4.18 ± 0.83, P < 0.001).

Epidural infusion group demonstrates superior efficacy in alleviating acute HZ symptoms, accelerating skin healing, and reducing PHN risk compared to oral therapy, with comparable safety and higher patient satisfaction. This approach offers a promising strategy for HZ management, warranting further validation through large-scale prospective trials.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** lidocaine (PubChem CID 3676), betamethasone (PubChem CID 3003), acyclovir (PubChem CID 135398513), mecobalamin (PubChem CID 6436232), vitamin B1 (PubChem CID 1130)
- **Diseases:** herpes zoster (MONDO:0005609), postherpetic neuralgia (MONDO:0041052)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** skin lesion (MESH:D012871), HZ (MESH:D006562), neuropathic pain condition (MESH:D009437), Pain (MESH:D010146), PHN (MESH:D051474), rash (MESH:D005076)
- **Chemicals:** vitamin B1 (MESH:D013831), betamethasone (MESH:D001623), mecobalamin (MESH:C019476), steroids (MESH:D013256), acyclovir (MESH:D000212), lidocaine (MESH:D008012)
- **Species:** Human alphaherpesvirus 3 (Varicella-zoster virus, no rank) [taxon 10335], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12185994/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12185994