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I'm told that I have a very high tolerance for pain. Yet, my wife could hear me far down the hall from radiology in the waiting room.
Now, some people report significant pain relief from a rhyzotomy. Some report no help at all. And a few, like me, had an increase in pain. I do not presume to have the research numbers, assuming they exist. Suffice it to say, many people experience worse pain after a rhyzotomy.
One bright spot is that it seems that the incidence of temporary or partial paralysis is low. So, it's painful. It might work. It might not. There is a small chance it will be worse.
Hope this was some help
Sarah
Scar tissue can impinge upon a spinal nerve root, creating sciatica, referrant pain and allodynia. Although rhyzotomy needles do not create the same damage (and fibrosis) that a scalpel creates, they nevertheless create potentially damaging scarring. Do not believe that one can go about having multiple rhyzotomies without the potential for having more pain that you had in the first place. Yes, it's better than having spinal fusion. But, these are not carefree steroidal injections or epidurals. Any invasive procedure carries some risk of morbidity.
You can go to the Cleveland Clinic, Mayo Clinic or Johns Hopkins; it won't make any difference. The rhyzotomy has low morbidity, but also a low success rate. If it helps, great. If it doesn't help, beware that additional iterations are just as likely to fail.
Good luck!
If your medications aren't helping, tell your doctor. Most of us do much better with a long-acting narcotic, saving the short-acting drug for breakthrough pain. It sounds to me like you are under medicated.
You should always try the least invasive treatments before going under the knife. Spine surgery has a success rate of 50% for pain (80% for improved function). I would most definitely go for nerve root and Facet injections and even a rhyzotomy, before surgery. Save that for a last resort option. If the injections don't help, you can also try TENS, biofeedback, a spinal cord stimulator and an intrathecal infusion pump - all recommended before surgery.
Finally, I encourage you to seek out at least two other opinions from spine surgeons (note, this is not an ordinary orthopedic surgeon or neurosurgeon). Try to find fellowship-trained spine surgeons in your area. They are far more well trained and talented than anyone else. For example, leading edge cervical spine surgery for disc herniation involves disc replacement. Disc replacement offers the stability of traditional fusion with the rage of motion of a microdiscectomy. And, your have your osteophytes removed at the same time. Spine surgeons can be located at or near teaching hospitals.
I think your surgeon might be giving you some BS about fusion ending your working career. I had multilevel fusion and continued to work for 15 years. Does he perform disc replacement? Just one more reason to obtain more opinions from the very best - spine surgeons. You deserve to have the most talented physicians. Meanwhile, you could manage your pain with better medication. Have you enrolled in comprehensive pain management? If not, ask for a referral. There are dozens of non-invasive and minimally-invasive treatments that can help you better manage your chronic pain.
Good luck, Perry. And, please keep us informed.
I had a C5-6 discectomy in 1992 when I was losing function in my hands, and then six months later I was rear-ended at a stop sign and the next disc herniated. I opted to leave that one alone and avoid surgery as I only had pain, but no loss of function. That worked best for me. Surgery only has about a 50% chance of working for pain relief. My neurosurgeon would only mess with discs if ones function was bad. He said the odds for pain relief were not worth the risks. I am reading the same stats these days for pain relief with spinal surgery.
I would also ask about an antidepressant and a seizure drug to add to the mix. Often by taking a cocktail of drugs and doing biofeedback, cognitive behavioral therapy, PT, etc. you can live fairly comfortably for years.
You did not mention any meds except the lortabs, so I don't know if you have already tried other things or not.
Take care, Annette
I'm not for sure this is correct, once your prescribed pain medication you should be able to do any job, for most people with chronic pain the medication only works to stop your pain and doesn't interfere with your job, no matter what your doing, driving, working with heavy equipment ect... you do have rights. I'm been in Pain Management for years and its helped me become a much more productive person. I really don't think a job can fire you for taking prescribed medication, no matter what kind of medication it is. If you have problems have your PM doctor call your job and explain to them what the medication is for and that its to help you. I've never had any problems before but I've known people that have been fired only to be re-hired after they find out they can be sued for this kind of discrimination. Good Luck.

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