Does Surgery Provide Pain Relief for Chronic Back & Neck Pain?
Although most of you will not require surgery, it is always important to be well educated in your pain relief options read on. In the most serious cases, when your pain does
not respond to other therapies, surgery may relieve pain caused by back & neck problems
or serious musculoskeletal injuries.
Some surgical procedures may be performed
in a doctor’s office under local anesthesia, while others require
hospitalization. It may take months or even a couple of years after surgery before one is fully
healed, and some may suffer permanent loss of flexibility. Since invasive
back surgery is not always successful, it should be performed only in patients
with progressive neurologic disease or damage to the peripheral nerves.
Some of the procedures available are as follows:
- Discectomy is one of the more common ways to
remove pressure on a nerve root from a bulging disc or bone spur. During the
procedure the surgeon takes out a small piece of the lamina (the arched bony
roof of the spinal canal) to remove the obstruction below.
- Foraminotomy is an
operation that “cleans out” or enlarges the bony hole (foramen) where a
nerve root exits the spinal canal. Bulging discs or joints thickened with age
can cause narrowing of the space through which the spinal nerve exits and can
press on the nerve, resulting in pain, numbness, and weakness in an arm or
leg. Small pieces of bone over the nerve are removed through a small slit,
allowing the surgeon to cut away the blockage and relieve the pressure on the
nerve.
- IntraDiscal Electrothermal
Therapy (IDET)
uses thermal energy to treat pain resulting from a cracked or bulging spinal
disc. A special needle is inserted via a catheter into the disc and heated to
a high temperature for up to 20 minutes. The heat thickens and seals the disc
wall and reduces inner disc bulge and irritation of the spinal nerve.
- Nucleoplasty uses radiofrequency energy to
treat patients with low back pain from contained, or mildly herniated, discs.
Guided by x-ray imaging, a wand-like instrument is inserted through a needle
into the disc to create a channel that allows inner disc material to be
removed. The wand then heats and shrinks the tissue, sealing the disc wall.
Several channels are made depending on how much disc material needs to be
removed.
- Radiofrequency
lesioning is a procedure using
electrical impulses to interrupt nerve conduction (including the conduction of
pain signals) for 6 to12 months. Using x-ray guidance, a special needle is
inserted into nerve tissue in the affected area. Tissue surrounding the needle
tip is heated for 90-120 seconds, resulting in localized destruction of the
nerves.
- Spinal fusion is used to strengthen the spine
and prevent painful movements. The spinal disc(s) between two or more
vertebrae is removed and the adjacent vertebrae are “fused” by bone grafts
and/or metal devices secured by screws. Spinal fusion may result in some loss
of flexibility in the spine and requires a long recovery period to allow the
bone grafts to grow and fuse the vertebrae together.
- Spinal laminectomy (also known as spinal
decompression) involves the removal of the lamina (usually both sides) to
increase the size of the spinal canal and relieve pressure on the spinal cord
and nerve roots.
Other surgical procedures to relieve moderate to severe chronic
back and neck pain include:
- Rhizotomy, in which the nerve root close to
where it enters the spinal cord is cut to block nerve transmission and all
senses from the area of the body experiencing pain.
I have had this procedure done several times in my neck and it has been incredibly helpful in giving me neck pain relief.
- Cordotomy, where
bundles of nerve fibers on one or both sides of the spinal cord are
intentionally severed to stop the transmission of pain signals to the brain; and
- Dorsal root entry zone operation, or DREZ, in
which spinal neurons transmitting the patient’s pain are destroyed surgically.
Reference:
Reference:Low Back Pain Fact
Sheet, National Institute of Neurological Disorders &
Stroke
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