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Date: October 10, 2025
Guest Skeptic: Dr. Sergey Motov is an Emergency Physician in the Department of Emergency Medicine, Maimonides Medical Center in New York City. He is also one of the world’s leading researchers on pain management in the emergency department.
Case: A 37-year-old man presents to the emergency department (ED) with severe right-sided flank pain. The pain started about eight hours ago as a vague discomfort in his right flank, but it has gotten progressively worse and now is radiating to his groin. Patient reports nausea, an increased urge to urinate and noticing blood in his urine on one occasion. The patient denies prior medical or surgical history.
Upon ED arrival, his vital signs are normal. Physical examination revealed a stated age patient in distress due to severe right flank pain, prominent right-sided costovertebral angle tenderness, and absence of abdominal tenderness or guarding. While strongly considering renal colic in differential diagnosis and reaching for the bedside ultrasound, you are wondering if a single dose of a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory (NSAID) will be enough to relieve this patient’s pain, or should you add Magnesium or Lidocaine?
Background: Renal colic is a common and extremely painful emergency department (ED) complaint encountered in the ED that frequently recurs. The nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) given intravenously or intramuscularly (IM) are frequently used as first-line therapy. However, about 30% of ED patients receiving NSAIDS require rescue analgesia in the form of opioids. Opioid use, though effective, is limited at times due to the potentially dangerous adverse effects. Thus, there might be a role for other non-opioid classes of drugs to be co-administered with NSAIDs for relief of renal colic.
Magnesium sulfate (MgSO₄) has been suggested as a possible treatment option. It may blunt ureteral smooth muscle spasm by antagonizing calcium influx in smooth muscle and by N‑methyl‑D‑aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonism. These are mechanisms that can reduce visceral pain and augment other analgesics. Small ED trials and meta‑analyses suggest MgSO₄ can reduce pain scores and opioid use in renal colic, though the evidence base has been limited and heterogeneous [1].
Another suggested treatment modality for renal colic is intravenous lidocaine. We looked at this treatment on SGEM#202 and were unimpressed with the efficacy. Systemic lidocaine blocks voltage‑gated sodium channels and appears to modulate central sensitization and visceral pain pathways. In ED populations, systematic reviews indicate IV lidocaine offers variable analgesia with a mixed signal for benefit, and renal colic–specific RCTs suggest it may be inferior to ketorolac and best considered (if at all) as part of a multimodal strategy rather than as monotherapy [2].
Reference: Toumia M, Sassi S, Dhaoui R, et al. Magnesium Sulfate Versus Lidocaine as an Adjunct for Renal Colic in the Emergency Department: A Randomized, Double-Blind Controlled Trial. Ann Emerg Med 2024
Authors’ Conclusions: “Adding intravenous MgSO4, but not lidocaine, to IM diclofenac offered superior pain relief but at levels below accepted thresholds for clinical importance.”
Quality Checklist for Randomized Clinical Trials:
Results: They screened 1,321 patients and included 840 who were randomized (280 per arm). The mean age is in the mid 40s with a fairly even male/female split. The mean baseline NRS ~8.5–8.7. Ultrasound showed stones in ~20% and pyelocaliceal dilation in over one-third of patients.
Comment on Authors’ Conclusion Compared to SGEM Conclusion: We would have tweaked the conclusion to say: Adding intravenous MgSO₄, but not lidocaine, to IM diclofenac MAY offer superior pain relief, but at levels below accepted thresholds for clinical importance.
Case Resolution: You proceeded with administration of 10mg of IV Ketorolac as a single agent, and upon assessment of the patient at 20 minutes, the patient verbalized significant pain relief without experiencing any adverse effects. Urinalysis is positive for blood, while complete blood count, complete metabolic panel, and the remainder of the urinalysis are normal. A non-contrast CT scan reveals a 4 mm non-obstructing stone in the right distal ureter.
Dr. Sergey Motov
Clinical Application: Intravenous adjunctive MgSO₄ does not seem to provide clinically meaningful pain relief in patients with renal colic but leads to frequent development of facial flashing. This precludes if from routine use in the ED for patients with renal colic. Similarly, IV lidocaine combined with parenteral NSAIDs does not provide clinically meaningful pain relief in patients with renal colic, and the evidence doesn’t support its use at this time.
What Do I Tell the Patient? It looks like you have classic kidney‑stone pain. I will order an IV analgesic called ketorolac that should reduce your pain and make you more comfortable. However, if you are still in pain in 15-20 minutes after receiving this medication, I will proceed with ordering intravenous morphine.
Keener Kontest: Last week’s winner was Dr. Steven Steltz from NZ. He knew it was called Cable Beach in Broome, Western Australia, because it was the site where an undersea telegraph cable came ashore in 1889, connecting Australia to the rest of the world via Java.
Listen to the SGEM podcast this week to hear the trivia question. If you know the answer, send an email to [email protected] with “keener” in the subject line. The first correct answer will receive a cool skeptical prize.
Other SGEM Episodes:
References:
The post PODCAST:Smooth Muscle Relaxator – But does Magnesium Work for Renal Colic? first appeared on האיגוד הישראלי לרפואה דחופה.
By פרמדיקים – האיגוד הישראלי לרפואה דחופהDate: October 10, 2025
Guest Skeptic: Dr. Sergey Motov is an Emergency Physician in the Department of Emergency Medicine, Maimonides Medical Center in New York City. He is also one of the world’s leading researchers on pain management in the emergency department.
Case: A 37-year-old man presents to the emergency department (ED) with severe right-sided flank pain. The pain started about eight hours ago as a vague discomfort in his right flank, but it has gotten progressively worse and now is radiating to his groin. Patient reports nausea, an increased urge to urinate and noticing blood in his urine on one occasion. The patient denies prior medical or surgical history.
Upon ED arrival, his vital signs are normal. Physical examination revealed a stated age patient in distress due to severe right flank pain, prominent right-sided costovertebral angle tenderness, and absence of abdominal tenderness or guarding. While strongly considering renal colic in differential diagnosis and reaching for the bedside ultrasound, you are wondering if a single dose of a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory (NSAID) will be enough to relieve this patient’s pain, or should you add Magnesium or Lidocaine?
Background: Renal colic is a common and extremely painful emergency department (ED) complaint encountered in the ED that frequently recurs. The nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) given intravenously or intramuscularly (IM) are frequently used as first-line therapy. However, about 30% of ED patients receiving NSAIDS require rescue analgesia in the form of opioids. Opioid use, though effective, is limited at times due to the potentially dangerous adverse effects. Thus, there might be a role for other non-opioid classes of drugs to be co-administered with NSAIDs for relief of renal colic.
Magnesium sulfate (MgSO₄) has been suggested as a possible treatment option. It may blunt ureteral smooth muscle spasm by antagonizing calcium influx in smooth muscle and by N‑methyl‑D‑aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonism. These are mechanisms that can reduce visceral pain and augment other analgesics. Small ED trials and meta‑analyses suggest MgSO₄ can reduce pain scores and opioid use in renal colic, though the evidence base has been limited and heterogeneous [1].
Another suggested treatment modality for renal colic is intravenous lidocaine. We looked at this treatment on SGEM#202 and were unimpressed with the efficacy. Systemic lidocaine blocks voltage‑gated sodium channels and appears to modulate central sensitization and visceral pain pathways. In ED populations, systematic reviews indicate IV lidocaine offers variable analgesia with a mixed signal for benefit, and renal colic–specific RCTs suggest it may be inferior to ketorolac and best considered (if at all) as part of a multimodal strategy rather than as monotherapy [2].
Reference: Toumia M, Sassi S, Dhaoui R, et al. Magnesium Sulfate Versus Lidocaine as an Adjunct for Renal Colic in the Emergency Department: A Randomized, Double-Blind Controlled Trial. Ann Emerg Med 2024
Authors’ Conclusions: “Adding intravenous MgSO4, but not lidocaine, to IM diclofenac offered superior pain relief but at levels below accepted thresholds for clinical importance.”
Quality Checklist for Randomized Clinical Trials:
Results: They screened 1,321 patients and included 840 who were randomized (280 per arm). The mean age is in the mid 40s with a fairly even male/female split. The mean baseline NRS ~8.5–8.7. Ultrasound showed stones in ~20% and pyelocaliceal dilation in over one-third of patients.
Comment on Authors’ Conclusion Compared to SGEM Conclusion: We would have tweaked the conclusion to say: Adding intravenous MgSO₄, but not lidocaine, to IM diclofenac MAY offer superior pain relief, but at levels below accepted thresholds for clinical importance.
Case Resolution: You proceeded with administration of 10mg of IV Ketorolac as a single agent, and upon assessment of the patient at 20 minutes, the patient verbalized significant pain relief without experiencing any adverse effects. Urinalysis is positive for blood, while complete blood count, complete metabolic panel, and the remainder of the urinalysis are normal. A non-contrast CT scan reveals a 4 mm non-obstructing stone in the right distal ureter.
Dr. Sergey Motov
Clinical Application: Intravenous adjunctive MgSO₄ does not seem to provide clinically meaningful pain relief in patients with renal colic but leads to frequent development of facial flashing. This precludes if from routine use in the ED for patients with renal colic. Similarly, IV lidocaine combined with parenteral NSAIDs does not provide clinically meaningful pain relief in patients with renal colic, and the evidence doesn’t support its use at this time.
What Do I Tell the Patient? It looks like you have classic kidney‑stone pain. I will order an IV analgesic called ketorolac that should reduce your pain and make you more comfortable. However, if you are still in pain in 15-20 minutes after receiving this medication, I will proceed with ordering intravenous morphine.
Keener Kontest: Last week’s winner was Dr. Steven Steltz from NZ. He knew it was called Cable Beach in Broome, Western Australia, because it was the site where an undersea telegraph cable came ashore in 1889, connecting Australia to the rest of the world via Java.
Listen to the SGEM podcast this week to hear the trivia question. If you know the answer, send an email to [email protected] with “keener” in the subject line. The first correct answer will receive a cool skeptical prize.
Other SGEM Episodes:
References:
The post PODCAST:Smooth Muscle Relaxator – But does Magnesium Work for Renal Colic? first appeared on האיגוד הישראלי לרפואה דחופה.