Epidural to Relieve Arachnoiditis Pain
My pain management doctor recommended that I receive an epidural to help relieve my severe back pain due to arachnoiditis.
I'm terrified, however, to have any more injections or invasive procedures in my back.
I don't want to miss an opportunity for relief, but am so torn about whether I should proceed with an epidural.
I would appreciate any advice the group has to offer.
Janet
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Hello labgirl
I can understand wanting to relieve the horrific pain of AA. It has me unable to sit, stand or walk without intolerable pain. I'm working on it..however, just when you think it can't get worse, it can. Before I was diagnosed I had repeated injection procedures for the pain and my AA worsened every time. I also have EDS so that is a factor for developing adhesions also. I would now not ever let any needles near my spinal canal or cord. It's Russian Roulette. Of course this is only my experience and yours could be different I would ask your doctor what the chances are that you would develop more adhesions, making your arachnoiditis worse I wish you the best!
Hello,
Sorry for my delayed response to your comments.
I did decide to go forward with the epidural because I am so desperate for pain relief.
Unfortunately, it turned out to be an agonizing procedure for me. My doctor gave me
a sacral epidural that caused me to scream with incredible pain as the needle entered
my back. I begged him to stop the procedure, but he said he already had 60% of the injection complete and wanted to continue.
By the end of the injection, I was sobbing and shaking uncontrollably.
Long story short, after all that, it offered no relief whatsoever.
It was a very hard "lesson learned" and I will just need to continue on my search for relief that doesn't involve touching my spine in any way........no surgeries, no injections.
Thanks for responding to my question from back in January, though. Sadly, just a week after my injection, my husband, who suffered from Parkinson's had two falls at home and was very disoriented. He was admitted to the hospital and diagnosed additionally with dementia. He developed COVID and was then sent on to a SNF. After that, I had to have him stay in assisted living. He went downhill very quickly, falling almost every day for two months. He passed away in early April.
I'm struggling to recover from this trauma, but I know it will take a lot of time and prayer on my part.
Janet
I am so sorry to read about the horrible experience you had at such a young age.
You're absolutely right about the need for patients to be given full, complete, information about these injections before blithely administering them as "something to try".
Unfortunately, in my desperation to find relief, I went ahead with the epidural. It was excruciatingly painful and I screamed throughout the procedure. After all that, there was absolutely no relief. No more injections for me.
@labgirl I am sorry to hear about the loss of your husband. Having physical pain must make this so much harder. You may find our Loss & Grief group helpful as you would be communicating with other members going through similar circumstances.
Here is the link to the group.
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/group/loss-grief/
I am a cervical spine surgery patient and only had one spine injection which caused me a lot more pain and didn't help. I think I was allergic to something in the injection. It was the most painful experience in my life totally off the charts of what I previously thought was intense pain. I was also shaking uncontrollably and nearly passed out, but I managed to hold on with some deep breathing and imagery I chose to think about instead. I'm not doing another of those injections again. I don't have lumbar issues, but I can sympathize.
Jennifer