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New treatment for chronic
Arthritis-related back pain
Newswise — Radiofrequency
ablation, where heat energy destroys or
stuns the nerves of a painful joint, is a
developing therapy for chronic
arthritis-related back pain. In the right
situation, this approach may be welcome --
though usually not permanent -- relief,
according to the October issue of Mayo
Clinic Health Letter.
The best candidates for
this procedure are those who have arthritis
that’s primarily confined to the spinal
area, and possibly the upper buttock region.
In an outpatient procedure, doctors apply
radiofrequency energy either continuously
for one to two minutes to destroy the
pain-causing nerve tissue; or in pulses to
stun the nerves.
The majority of people who
opt for continuous radiofrequency treatment
experience a greater than 50 percent pain
reduction. The relief lasts an average of
six to nine months. It’s not clear why pain
often returns, but doctors suspect that the
nerves reconnect over time. The procedure
can be repeated. However, patients may
experience diminishing benefits with
repeated treatments.
Pulsed radiofrequency may
be as effective in pain relief as the
continuous method, but the relief generally
does not last as long. In theory, since the
tissue is stunned and not destroyed, the
pulsed treatment is safer and not expected
to offer diminishing returns when repeated.
Definitive research has
not accurately quantified success rates. But
for patients with arthritis-related back
pain that hasn’t responded to other
treatments, radiofrequency ablation is an
option.
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