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Comparative Effectiveness of Cryoablation Using the ICE-Seed Cryoablation Needle With Steroid and Lidocaine Versus Steroid and Lidocaine Alone for Treatment of Morton's Neuroma
Morton's neuroma is a benign thickening involving the plantar interdigital nerve, most common in middle aged women. Morton's neuroma is one of the most frequent diagnoses seen in the investigators podiatry clinic and is difficult to treat. These lesions cause a burning or shooting pain that can radiate to the toes, or an aching pain in the ball of the foot. The pain is exacerbated with activity and certain footwear greatly limits activity in the involved patient population. Morton's neuroma is first treated conservatively with orthotics. Patients may require further interventions such as steroid injections. The literature reports only a 30% long term resolution of pain with the steroid. Surgical resection has a reported 51-85% success rate with 14-21% rate of complication; recurrent pain, numbness/loss of sensation, and subsequent stump neuromas. Cryoablation is well known to be efficacious for neuropathic pain and has recently been shown in two small studies to be safe and efficacious for treatment of Morton's neuroma. The investigators study will compare outcomes of cryoablation to corticosteroid injection in short- and long-term for treatment of Morton's neuroma that have failed conservative therapy.
Age
18 - 105 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Oregon Health Sciences University
Portland, Oregon, United States
Start Date
July 25, 2022
Primary Completion Date
December 30, 2026
Completion Date
December 31, 2027
Last Updated
October 16, 2025
32
ESTIMATED participants
Cryoablation
DEVICE
Nerve block
PROCEDURE
Lead Sponsor
Oregon Health and Science University
Collaborators
NCT05411224
NCT00284414
Data Source & Attribution
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