blog

Home / DeveloperSection / Blogs / Usage of Radiofrequency Rhizotomy procedure to decrease pain symptoms

Usage of Radiofrequency Rhizotomy procedure to decrease pain symptoms

Usage of Radiofrequency Rhizotomy procedure to decrease pain symptoms

Robina Thakur721 08-May-2020

There are very many people living with chronic pain in the world right now. Kentuckiana Pain Specialists are one of the best centers of interventional pain management in Louisville, KY.

Interventional pain management can especially help those who suffer from chronic pain manage their pain. It takes a lot of trying for someone like that to find a pain treatment that works.

Interventional pain management can be used to manage neck pain, back pain, and joint pain. The following are common interventional pain techniques:

Injections
Injections can be used to offer temporary relief from pain and such injections are called nerve blocks. They deliver powerful medication to your nerves to relieve pain.

A popular type of injection is the epidural steroid injection which delivers steroids to inflamed nerve roots in your lower back. Other prevalent injections are facet joint injections, single nerve root blocks, and sacroiliac joint injections.

Injections usually require several sessions (two to three) for optimal success. However, too many injections can have adverse side effects.

Radiofrequency Rhizotomy
Radiofrequency Rhizotomy temporarily switches off your nerves’ ability to deliver pain messages to your brain. It does that by using an electrode with a heated tip that is guided using X-ray technology.

Radiofrequency Rhizotomy is quite a complex procedure with possible side effects but it has tremendous medium-term benefits. It offers pain relief for a period of between 6 months and a year.

It is usually done alongside some form of physical therapy. The therapy is used to treat the underlying causes of the pain.

Intrathecal Pump Implants
Also referred to as pain pumps, they are a form of treatment that also works by preventing pain signals from reaching your brain. They transmit powerful medication to the source of your pain and are usually used for cancer pain and back or neck surgeries that went wrong.
The procedure involves getting a pump implanted under your skin. The pump is then programmed to deliver a certain dose of pain medication at a certain frequency. The pump has to be refilled every couple of months by the doctor.

The pump offers regular pain relief and reduces the amount of pain medication you consume. It is also a very invasive procedure and is usually implemented when other pain relief treatments have failed to work.

Electrical Stimulation
Electrical stimulation is also an invasive procedure that involves implanting an electrical device underneath the skin. Two devices are implanted: a stimulator and an electrical lead that sends electrical impulses to the area affected by the pain.

The electrical impulses disrupt the sending of electrical signals to the brain. Electrical stimulation is mostly used for conditions that affect your spine, brain, or nerves such as Parkinson’s Disease or epilepsy. You can either have spinal cord stimulation or brain stimulation.

Many patients claim to feel a tingling sensation instead of pain with this treatment.

Electrical stimulation is also an option of last resort and is implemented after other pain management treatments have failed to produce worthwhile results.

You need to have a serious discussion with your doctor before getting any interventional pain management treatment.


Updated 11-Aug-2020
Nicholas Rutkowski, O.D, and associates. Optometry involves cross-examination, diagnosis, and treatment of eye disorders and any diseases affecting the eye. Also, located at Bourbonnais, Illinois, Nicholas Rutkowski, O.D

Leave Comment

Comments

Liked By