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  <title>Corticosteroids and Contrast for Pain Procedures: Anesthesia Board Prep Pearls!</title>
  <description> 🎙️ PainExam Podcast Show Notes  Corticosteroids &amp;amp;amp; Contrast Agents in Pain Management + Evidence-Based Steroid Selection  🔥 Episode Overview In this high-yield episode of the PainExam Podcast, David Rosenblum breaks down a must-know board topic: 👉 Injectable corticosteroids vs contrast agents in interventional pain procedures This episode goes beyond basics and dives into:   Particulate vs non-particulate steroids  Comparative profiles of dexamethasone, betamethasone, triamcinolone, and methylprednisolone  Contrast agent selection and safety  Critical complications including embolization and neurotoxicity A recent study comparing steroid effectiveness in transforaminal epidural injections  This is essential for physicians preparing for the ABA Pain Medicine boards and for clinicians performing spine interventions.  🧠 Core Concept   Corticosteroids = therapeutic (reduce inflammation)  Contrast agents = diagnostic + safety tools (confirm needle placement)  👉 Board pearl: Steroids treat pain — contrast prevents complications  💉 Corticosteroids — High-Yield Comparison 🔬 Mechanism   Inhibit phospholipase A2  Reduce inflammatory mediators  Decrease nerve root irritation   ⚖️ Key Steroids Compared       Steroid  Type  Particle Profile  Key Advantage  Major Risk      Dexamethasone  Non-particulate No aggregation Safest for TFESI Possibly shorter duration    Triamcinolone  Particulate Large particles Longer depot effect Embolic infarction    Methylprednisolone  Particulate  Aggregates Strong anti-inflammatory Avoid in cervical TFESI    Betamethasone Mixed Depends on formulation  Potent Acetate = particulate risk       🚨 Major Steroid Risks Local:   Tissue atrophy  Depigmentation  Systemic:   Hyperglycemia  Adrenal suppression  Immunosuppression  Catastrophic (Board Tested):   Spinal cord infarction  Stroke  👉 Caused by intra-arterial injection of particulate steroids  📊 Contrast Agents — High-Yield Review  Common Agents   Iohexol (Omnipaque)  Iopamidol (Isovue)  Iodixanol (Visipaque)   🎯 Purpose   Confirm needle placement  Detect intravascular injection  Prevent intrathecal injection   ⚠️ Risks   Allergic reaction  Anaphylaxis  Contrast-induced nephropathy  👉 Board pearl: Shellfish allergy ≠ contrast allergy  ⚠️ Critical Safety Topic: Gadolinium Gadolinium-based contrast agents are: ❌ NOT approved for epidural or intrathecal use ❌ NOT safe substitutes for iodinated contrast in spine procedures  🚨 Intrathecal Gadolinium Risks   Encephalopathy  Seizures  Respiratory distress  Death  👉 Extremely high-yield board concept  📚 Evidence-Based Medicine Segment  Study Review: Steroid Selection in TFESI A recent study comparing:   Dexamethasone  Methylprednisolone  Betamethasone   🔑 Key Findings   Dexamethasone showed comparable or better outcomes No clear advantage of particulate steroids  Similar rates of:   Repeat injections  Surgical progression     🎯 Clinical Implication 👉 Efficacy differences are smaller than previously thought 👉 Safety is driving practice change  🚨 Board-Level Takeaway   Non-particulate steroids = safer  Outcomes ≈ similar  Technique matters more than steroid choice  👉 Best exam answer: dexamethasone for TFESI  🎯 Board Prep Summary   Dexamethasone = safest for transforaminal injections  Particulate steroids = embolic risk  Contrast must be used before steroid injection  Gadolinium = dangerous in neuraxial space  Clinical outcomes often similar across steroid types   🎓 Pain Board Prep Resources Prepare for your ABA Pain Medicine boards with: 👉 https://painexam.com 👉 https://nrappain.org  🏆 Why Physicians Choose NRAP Academy   High-yield board review content  Thousands of MCQs  Virtual Pain Fellowship  Ultrasound + regenerative training  Real-world clinical integration  Register Today!  🎤 Upcoming Training   Ultrasound-guided pain procedures  Regenerative medicine courses (PRP, biologics)  Hands-on workshops  Register Today!  📢 Call to Action If you’re serious about passing your boards and practicing safer interventional pain medicine: ✅ Subscribe to the PainExam Podcast ✅ Join the Virtual Pain Fellowship ✅ Visit https://nrappain.org &amp;amp;nbsp; References Calvo N, Jamil M, Feldman S, Shah A, Nauman F, Ferrara J. Neurotoxicity from intrathecal gadolinium administration: Case presentation and brief review. Neurol Clin Pract. 2020 Feb;10(1):e7-e10. doi: 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000000696. PMID: 32190427; PMCID: PMC7057078. Moreira, Alexandra M., et al. &amp;quot;Comparing the effectiveness and safety of dexamethasone, methylprednisolone and betamethasone in lumbar transforaminal epidural steroid injections.&amp;quot; Pain physician 27.5 (2024): 341. </description>
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