When is an Epidural Injection Appropriate for Back Pain?
WEST ORANGE, N.J. (PRWEB) March 10, 2021
If you hear the word “epidural” and think of pain relief for women giving birth, think a bit bigger: Epidural steroid injections have been a tried-and-true treatment for chronic back pain since the early 1950s, according to Endoscopic Spine Surgeon Kaixuan Liu, MD, PhD, founder and medical director of Atlantic Spine Center.
One of the most prevalent procedures doctors perform for low back pain, epidural injections are done about 9 million times each year, Dr. Liu explains. This important option is high on the list of effective treatments for those with chronic back or neck pain, which also include exercise, physical therapy and medications.
Delivered to the epidural space in the spine, each epidural injection blends two substances: a local anesthetic, which interrupts pain signals from the spinal area; and a long-lasting steroid to reduce inflammation and irritation in the region it’s injected.
“It takes only minutes to do, but an epidural steroid injection can provide relief from lingering back or neck pain lasting months or longer,” Dr. Liu says. “It’s well worth the small investment of time involved.”
Back conditions that benefit
A long list of back problems can benefit from epidural injections, Dr. Liu notes. What do they all have in common? “In general, these conditions squeeze or irritate nerves radiating from the spine,” he says.
They include:
- Sciatica, pain radiating down one or both legs from the lower back
- Herniated discs in the lumbar (lower back) area, where the soft center of a disc pushes through its hard shell and into nerves in the spinal canal
- Spinal stenosis, a narrowing of the spinal canal that pinches nerves in the spinal cord
- Degenerative disc disease, where a collapsed disc space presses on nerves
- Compression fractures, when one or many bones in the spine weaken and break
- Cysts in spine joints or nerve roots
- Annular tears, where tears form in a disc’s outer layer
Since this list of back conditions affect many thousands of patients each year, that means epidural injections are an option for a large proportion of back and neck pain patients, Dr. Liu says. “These injections not only can provide quick relief on their own, but they also promote exercise, stretching and other activities that help patients improve even more,” he adds.
How epidural injections are given
You might be wondering just how an epidural injection is given. No trepidation is needed, Dr. Liu says, since the process is simple and quick. First, you lay on your belly on an X-ray table. The skin closest to the injection site will be swabbed with anesthetic to numb the area.
Using fluoroscopy, a “live X-ray” technique to view the area surrounding your spine, your doctor injects the steroid mixture into the epidural space near where your pain originates. Within 30 minutes – part of which will be used to monitor you after the injection – you can go home, Dr. Liu explains.
You’ll be encouraged to rest for the remainder of the day but can resume normal movements and activities the following day. Depending on your results, you may benefit from repeating the injection several weeks later, Dr. Liu says, while three epidural injections are generally considered reasonable within six months.
“Before your doctor would ever consider invasive surgery to alleviate your back or neck pain, epidural steroid injections would be one of the key conservative treatments tried,” Dr. Liu says. “In most cases, this minimally invasive option works extremely well and makes a true difference in patients’ quality of life.”
Atlantic Spine Centeris a nationally recognized leader for endoscopic spine surgery with several locations in NJ and NYC. http://www.atlanticspinecenter.com, http://www.atlanticspinecenter.nyc
Kaixuan Liu, MD, PhD, is a board-certified physician who is fellowship-trained in minimally invasive spine surgery at Atlantic Spine Center.