LUMBAR TRANSFORAMINAL EPIDURAL STEROID INJECTION

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LUMBAR TRANSFORAMINAL EPIDURAL STEROID INJECTION

LUMBAR TRANSFORAMINAL EPIDURAL STEROID INJECTION IN KENTUCKY AND INDIANA

This procedure is well suited to relieve pain from pinched nerves’ in the spine. The nerve can be impinged or pinched due to multiple possible causes. The nerve or nerve root then swells due to this condition, and the pain radiates along the path of the nerve causing pain in the places where the nerve endings terminate. The effect of the injection is too place anti-inflammatory steroid medication near the source of the painful swelling and decrease the pain by helping the nerve return to its normal state.

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Indications

This procedure is indicated for radicular type pain coming from ‘pinched’ nerves in the spine. The lumbar approach is recommended for lumbar or sacral nerves. It also is good for patients with leg pain that have had no response to a conservative management approach. If there is lumbar back surgery, this approach is sometimes helpful to target specific nerves or to avoid scar tissue from the surgery. Lumbar radiculopathy, lumbar stenosis, spondylosis with myelopathy, back injury, HNP or herniated disc of the lumbar spine, nerve root injury of the lumbar or sacral spine, coccyx pain or other lumbar/pelvic conditions that would cause nerve or nerve root swelling in the lower spine are all well suited for treatment with this procedure.

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What to expect

The patient can expect to have the procedure done while gaining access to the back. Usually, this occurs while lying face down and having fluoroscopic guidance for the placement of the needle into the central epidural space from the canal located near the central area below the spinal lamina. Local anesthesia to numb the skin and injection of steroids can be treated as an outpatient or office procedure without sedation needed.

outcomes

The procedure may take several days to get enough of the nerve swelling down to understand how the pain relief will take effect. The pain relief can last for several weeks to months or even longer. If the area reinjures or the nerve has impinged again, the pain may recur, and the procedure can be repeated as indicated.

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