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Interventional Pain Procedures
Interventional pain management focuses on relieving or managing pain to enhance the patient's quality of life through non-invasive strategies. Let’s find out more.
Patients who can no longer manage chronic or severe pain with medication and other conservative or non-surgical treatments need pain interventions. Applying techniques to prevent pain and reduce inflammation can help make daily activities easier for patients and successfully restore their quality of life.
Interventional pain procedures use less usual medical procedures to disrupt the nervous system's transmission of pain-stricken messages from nerve endings to the brain, thus disrupting the pain cycle.
Pain interventions can help alleviate many conditions, such as arthritis, back and neck pain, joint pain, muscular pain, cancer-related pain, Osteoporosis and Crohn's Disease, and pain syndrome, such as fibromyalgia. You will work with pain management professionals who can assist you in preventing pain without delay.
What is Interventional Pain Management?
Interventional pain management refers to a medical specialty that focuses on a range of pain prevention strategies, usually through injection therapy. Interventional pain management strategies play a role in a multidisciplinary approach to relieve your pain and other symptoms. These methods are used together with psychiatric and emotional therapies and prescription medications.
However, what makes interventional pain management so different from other pain management procedures is that it emphasizes the importance of an accurate diagnosis so that treatment can begin quickly.
Rather than simply prescribing medication or recommending physical therapy alone, a qualified pain management specialist uses all available resources to eliminate pain as quickly and effectively, and efficiently as possible for each patient.
Types of Interventional Pain Management procedures
The pain management specialists provide epidural steroid injections, nerve barriers, radiofrequency ablation, spinal cord stimulation, joint facet injections, lumbar sympathetic plexus blocks, and trigger point injections. Every procedure is performed based on hospitalization.
Several other interventional pain management procedures can help you deal with pain. Intra-intradiscal electrothermal therapy, for example, uses heat to destroy nerve fibers to reduce your pain. Another example is cooling cryogenic, which is similar to a radiofrequency rhizotomy, but instead, it temporarily shuts down the nerves by freezing.
Interventional pain management uses less common techniques such as nerves or artificial drug delivery systems. It includes the following most common interventions:
Radiofrequency Nerve Ablation: It refers to the application of radio waves to heat and destroys the nerve tissue, thus reducing the pain symptoms emitted from the source. It uses X-ray guidance, and radiofrequency nerve ablation brings precisely controlled heat to disable temporarily and selects nerves that identify as causing pain.
Internal" Discography: "Internal" Discography looks at the spinal discs to determine if they are not a source of pain.
Percutaneous Discectomy / Nucleoplasty: Percutaneous Discectomy / Nucleoplasty is a procedure that removes tissue from the spinal disc to reduce and reduce stress.
Imaging: Steroid injections target pain points in the body to reduce inflammation. Commonly used injections are tissue and joints, facet joints, trigger joints, and epidural injections, joint injections (to relieve pain from osteoarthritis and other conditions).
Pain Pump. This device is surgically inserted and delivers pain medication directly to the area where the pain begins.
Nervous, root, and central branch blocks: Nervous, root, and central branch blocks are processes that disrupt sensory signals to the brain to relieve pain. The block can also help reduce inflammation. In some cases, a block is used as a diagnostic tool.
Rhizotomy: Rhizotomy is a procedure that uses hot electrodes to "close" the pain signals when applied to arteries.
Spinal Cord Stimulation: Spinal Cord Stimulation uses electrical energy in a pain source with the help of an implanted medical tool. Electrical signals block the brain's ability to detect symptoms of pain.
Conditions treated with Interventional Pain Management
Some of the conditions of pain and discomfort treated with pain management intervention strategies include
-Arthritis.
-Central pain syndromes (post-stroke pain, spinal cord injury.)
-Cervical and lumbar strain.
-Pain in the chest walls.
-Chronic backache and neck pain.
-Complex Regional Pain Syndrome ( CRPS) Can be called Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy).
-Degenerative disc disease (cervical, thoracic and lumbar.)
-Facet disease - cervical, thoracic and lumbar.
-Facial pain - TMJ, neuromas (trauma), atypical facial pain
-Headache (occipital neuralgia, migraines, headache, group headache.)
-Herniated disc.
-Unya.
-Musculoskeletal pain.
-Myofascial Pain Syndrome.
-Peripheral or diabetic neuropathy.
-Phantom limb pain / postoperative pain.
-Postherpetic neuralgia and herpes zoster
-Postoperative pain.
-Post-traumatic pain syndrome.
-Radiculopathy, cervical, thoracic and lumbar
-Sacroiliac joint pain.
-Whiplash-related issues.