Spinal stenosis and ablations
Hello, I have been having ablations for years with good luck but lately they are not lasting as long and they are not relieving as much pain. Have any of you experienced this? If so, what else have you tried besides surgery?
Thank you
Kris
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a nerve block is an epidural which is not an RFA (radio frequency Ablatia). The epidural is an injection to give pain relief from inflammation or it is diagnostic to determine if that is the area your pain comes from. If you are relieved of your pain then they will schedule the RFA.
I had an epidural when I was delivering my son, I agree it was horrid!!! but I've had them again later for a variety of pain relief in my spine. Not bad at all! I think you should talk to them.
One time I had an RFA and it was super painful so they use twilight sleep but I have to find a driver. Maybe the nerves are "knocked out" now so I have no difficulty at the injection site. Good luck!
Could you explain the stem cells and if they helped? Thanks.
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1 ReactionI was very sore after the ablation for sure yes. I was also very stiff. For me it lasted about 3 weeks of one and off pain. Every one is different so don’t get discouraged but the ablation did not help me.
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2 ReactionsWhen I had a nerve block it was not an epidural. The doctor put 6 needles in my back to determine area of pain. The first two were painful he said they were the most tender. The other 4 were fine. I did have an epidural prior to this to see if it would relieve my pain and it did not. Then that was the need for the nerve block. I am 3 days out from my RFA and I'm feeling the site they went into my back. So far so good. I go for my right side in 2 weeks. Hopefully I will be done.
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1 ReactionIt is a little confusing to me. I've had epidurals. I've had targeted injections to figure out which nerves need to be "ablated." RFA's eliminate my referred pain and in my case were never used to get rid of my back pain.
When I was young I'd get off the table and go back to work. (40) now I am 67 and I can very achy in my lumbar for up to a week. Sometimes there is no recovery needed. By now, I've had so many injections over the years the nerves are probably too frightened to grow back, ha!
RFAs are for facet joint spinal stenosis. But I had degenerative disc disease and disc compression and a whole lot of back lumbar back needing surgery in 2018. I had a fantastic orthopedic surgeon at UCSD. He gave me my life back in spades! The rest of my back is degenderating around the small fusion he did. Only a matter of time until I have to return. However - I get decades of relief from referred front leg/thigh pain from the RFA - only the heat works on me - not the pulse. I'm repeating that. Sometimes they have to do it again in a few months but it lasts decades. (the nerves can regenerate). I'd rather do that then icky cortisone injections.
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1 Reaction3 ablations? They hurt huh?! How long to not feel like death because of being post-op?
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1 ReactionYou are asleep silly. Doesn't hurt!
The first Doctor I saw wanted to do "twilight", which is only partial anesthesia. I screamed!!
I changed Doctors. Nothing to it!
Can someone please tell me what an ablation is and how it works?
In my case, the ablation procedure was easier than any of the four injections I had prior (steroids-twice, facet joint injections and median branch block) and the recovery was very quick- just a couple days.
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3 ReactionsI'm glad it went well!