At Comprehensive Pain Medicine, physicians with
subspecialty board certification and training in controlling
pain employ a variety of treatments including:
Injections are interventions in
which anesthetics and other medications are injected
directly into the area near a nerve, preventing pain
signals (or blocking the pain) from reaching the brain.
The types of injections we offer are as follows:
-Trigger
Point Injections
-Epidural Steroid Injections
-Facet Joint Injections
-Sacroilliac Joint Injections
Radiofrequency Rhizotomies
is a method of interrupting pain signals by using
a heat probe inserted through a special needle that
flows through the tissue and eliminates specific pain
signals.
IDET is a minimally invasive treatment
in which the physician applies controlled levels of
thermal energy (heat) to a broad section of the affected
disc wall. Therapy may result in contraction or closure
of the disc wall fissures or a reduction in the bulge
of the inner disc material.
Disc Decompression is designed to
help treat patients with a bulging or contained herniated
disc that causes lower back or leg pain.
Dorsal Column &
Spinal Cord Stimulators are
devices that override painful nerve signals by transmitting
mild electrical impulses via a probe placed into the
epidural space.
Stellate
Ganglion Blocks, Selective Nerve Blocks, Axillary
Blocks
Our physicians work in cooperation with orthopedists,
neurosurgeons and oncologists to ensure the most professional
approach to controlling pain and restoring function.
Comprehensive Pain Medicine can help patients with
many conditions. Just visit our Conditions
page for detailed descriptions of health conditions
we can help overcome.
More Definitions:
Epidural Steroid Injections are
the most commonly performed injections. As with all
of our outpatient procedures, these injections are
performed using fluoroscopic (live x-ray) guidance
to ensure correct placement of administered medications.
Prior to the injection, the skin will be numbed by
a local anesthetic using a small needle. In this approach,
a mixture of anti-inflammatories, muscle relaxers,
and small dosage of steroid medications are injected
directly around the dura (the sac around the nerve
roots that contains cerebrospinal fluid). The frequency
with which these injections are administered varies
per physician. Epidurals are successful with approximately
50% of patients and with those that do obtain relief,
the results vary from one week to one year. Some physicians
prefer to perform these injections in a complete series
of three (3), and some prefer to save one or two injections
for any potential recurrent low back or leg pain.Common
symptoms after the injections include a warmth or
numbness in the legs from the effects of the local
anesthetic, dizziness, headache, or infection, but
are exceedingly rare. Relief from an injection generally
takes about three (3) days, but occasionally, occurs
immediately. Some patients obtain no relief at all
from the injection. Should that occur, you need to
see your physician in the office to discuss other
recommendations.
Facet Injections are administered
both for a therapeutic and diagnostic purpose, and
can, as with the epidural steroid injections, be targeted
to the cervical, thoracic or lumbar areas. These injections
use a contrast dye to pinpoint the source of pain
within the facet joints. During this procedure you
may feel some slight pressure or discomfort. Your
physician will be interested in how this discomfort
compares to your usual pain symptoms (this is the
diagnostic aspect of the procedure). He will want
you to keep track of any changes in your pain symptoms
over the days and weeks following the injection. As
with the epidurals, patients relief following a facet
injection tends to vary from minimal to long-term
(this is the therapeutic aspect).
Sacroiliac Joint Injection is an
injection of an anesthetic with a long lasting steroid
mixture into the sacroiliac joints, which are located
in the back where the lumbosacral spine joins the
pelvis. They are paired (right and left), are surrounded
by a joint capsule like the finger joints. There steroid
mixture reduces inflammation in the joint space. Immediately
after the injection, you may feel that your pain may
be gone or quite less. This is due to the local anesthetic
injected. This will generally last for a few hours.
Your pain may return and you may have a sore back/neck
for a day or two thereafter. This is due to the mechanical
process of needle insertion as well as initial irritation
from the steroid itself. Relief may not be noticeable
until the third to fifth day, and can last anywhere
from a few days to many months. Some possible side
effects include discomfort (most common), fluid retention,
weight gain, increased blood sugar (mainly diabetics),
elevated blood pressure, among others. Fortunately,
serious side effects and complications are uncommon.
Should you have any concerns, please contact our office.
IDET (Intradiscal Electrothermal Therapy)
is a simple and minimally invasive treatment whereby
your physician inserts an x-ray guided needle directly
into the affected disc. Then, a thin wire (catheter)
is inserted broadly through the inserted needle. Once
in position, the temperature of the heating section
of the catheter will be gradually increased, raising
the disc wall temperature, thus causing the collagen
of the disc wall to contract and thicken, creating
a new seal.In addition to clinical examination, your
physician will determine whether or not you are a
candidate for IDET using a number of diagnostic tests,
such as MRI and Discography to identify the affected
disc prior to recommending the procedure. IDET is
performed on an outpatient basis, however, the healing
process may take up to 12 to 16 weeks. During this
time it is very important that you treat your discs
with care. You will be fitted with a back brace, which
must be worn home the day of the procedure. Patients
generally report gradual relief from their symptoms,
a reduction or elimination of any medication use,
and an increase in their functional abilities.
Provocative Discography is a diagnostic
procedure in which a needle is placed into a lumbar
or cervical disc to identify whether there is an internal
disc disruption. During the procedure, performing
under live fluoroscopic imaging, contrast is injected
directly into the identified discs. We can then identify
the internal anatomy of the disc, as well as whether
there is a reproduction of the patient’s pain
pattern. This procedure is very important prior to
lumbar fusions to identify the exact discs that are
causing the pain pattern. It is also used to determine
whether or not a patient would be a candidate for
any additional pain management treatments, such as
IDET procedure. CT scans are commonly ordered by your
physician in conjunction with this procedure, and
must be performed immediately following the discography
while the contrast remains in the patient’s
system.
Radiofrequency (Rhizotomy) is a
proven, safe means of interruption of pain signals
that are transmitted through specific nerve supplies.
A very high radiofrequency current is passed down
a temperature monitoring probe, which is inserted
through a special needle. When the current flows through
the tissue, it heats the surrounding tissue to a temperature
that will eliminate specific pain signals. Once the
temperature electrode is inserted, test stimulation
will begin and you will be asked questions about where
you feel the sensation (this will assist your physician
in determining needle placement). Once this has been
verified, radiofrequency heating can befin. Please
note that the doctor may want to repeat the procedure
on multiple levels.
Stellate Ganglion Block (Sympathetic Block)
is an injection of local anesthetic into the front
of the neck for pain located in the head, neck, chest
or arm caused by RSD (Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy),
causalgia (nerve injury), herpes zoster (shingles),
or intractable angina. They may be used for either
therapeutic purposes, diagnostic purposes or both.
The spacing of injections will be based on how long
the pain relief is between injections (it will increase
after each injection). You can expect one of three
possible responses:
1. pain does not go away, but there is other evidence
of sympathetic block (this has a diagnostic value)
2. pain does not go away, and there is not evidence
of sympathetic block (this block is a technical failure)
3. pain goes away and stays away longer than the life
of the local anesthetic (this block was of therapeutic
value)
Note: The block will most likely have to be repeated
to get long lasting benefit.