Spinal pain management
Hello everyone, I have my 1st visit to the spinal pain management department on the 7th of June. I was referred for a spinal cord stimulator. The reason I am going to the Mayo Clinic, is I can not get anywhere with the Dr's here in New Mexico. I have had a double discectomy, a laminectomy, and three spinal fusions. No one knows why about two months after my last fusion, why I am in some much pain. I have trouble walking any distance now. When I was walking a mile and a half twice a day. Any feed back on spinal cord stimulators or even a different process to help with pain, would be greatly appreciated.
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My first visit at the Mayo Clinic, Tyler Young P.A-C., M.S. referred me to Pain management, which I will see Tyler Dunn M.D. He also told me it is a process to get the implant, 3 -4 months. In the process go back to my pain and spine management in Albuquerque, NM. and demand they do a Radio Frequency Ablation. I had the injections yesterday Friday 31st, which I could not be leave the difference. I could actually walk like a normal human being. It only lasted for a few hours, it was great for those few hours. I am fused from L2-SI joints. The Dr. that did my ablation injections told me the pain I have is Sciatic pain from not being able to move any of the muscles around the spine. He is the first one to tell any that, which makes since. I will see Tyler Dun M.D. on Friday June 7th, I can not wait to see what can come out of this visit.
Thank you for the information. The reason I am going to the Mayo Clinic from New Mexico, is, it is so hard to get into any Dr.'s office because there is such a shortage. With that is mind, it is even harder to get anything done once you get in. Everyone I have talked to that has visited the Mayo Clinic, I have not heard of any bad interactions, and everyone is getting things done and it is not taking months or even years.
Thank you for the information. That is good to know.
Thank you for the information. I am sixty years old, and since my last surgery about two months following is when my pain set in. I have been pretty immobile since then. Walking increases the pain, simple things like cooking and extending my arms over the sink or stove increases my pain. With all the information everyone has given me, I can not wait to see if they recommend a SCS for me. I am old enough that I can remember going to the Dr. and they would tell you what is wrong, now days you have to be the Dr. and tell them what you have and what they need to do for you. I had to tell my Dr.'s at the pain and spine management in NM, to do a Radio Frequency Ablation. I had the initial injections on the 31st of May, which I could not believe the temporary relief I received from it. They have not done the actual Ablation yet. This is just a temporary thing, you might bet a few days or a yew months relief for it. Then you have to start all over again. I want something permanent, so I can get back to a more normal life.
Thank you everyone for the information. I have a lot of information and questions to ask June 7th, when I see Tyler Dunn M.D. I am super excited about this upcoming visit. I hope I come out with getting some permanent relief in the near future.
My neurologist referred me to the Mayo Clinic and my case was rejected because the Mayo Clinic could not do anything more than what is available locally. So I haven't pursured going to the Mayo Clinic any further.
@bootmaker, I moved you latest post to your original discussion here:
- Spinal pain management: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/spinal-pain-management/
I did this so members you've been exchanging with can see your thank you and update. All the best with your upcoming appointment. Please send an update to share what you learn.
@bootmaker Welcome to Connect. After a few surgeries, you will have scar tissue from the surgical path and that can tighten up. It takes 6 weeks to heal an incision and longer for bone to heal from the surgery. After you get past that healing and it is safe to do physical therapy, you may want to consider myofascial release therapy that can loosen up tight tissue that may be causing pain. If have done MFR for a number of years and it really helps. It made my cervical fusion easier because my neck was not as tight, and my recovery was better.
Here is our discussion where you can learn more about MFR.
Neuropathy - "Myofascial Release Therapy (MFR) for treating compression and pain"
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/myofascial-release-therapy-mfr-for-treating-compression-and-pain/
There is a provider search at http://mfrtherapists.com/
Do your research to make a smart decision for YOU! Remember, you’ll need to charge the battery every few days & have the tech re-program it several times.
hello bootmaker. i'm new so I hope i'm replying in the right place regarding spinal pain. i'm 73 and have had back pain for 30 years or so. i've had a laminectomy at l4-l5 level, tried differed meds, etc. What is helping now is nerve ablation, a spnal cord stimulator, meds, some walking and swimming but not too much. have had phsical therapy. I will never be pain free but I'm learning to manage what I can and watch for new procedures. i go to a pain clinic in Florida and don't let regular docs give me pain meds. What i do take is always a step down from what would give more relief but I prefer to give myself room to edge up if i have to. Mind relaxation exercises help - every 5 minutes is heaven that wasn't there before. Just do the best you can, and keep your eyes and ears open to pain management news. i wish you a life with little to no pain!