The Role of Radiofrequency Ablation in Relieving Pain

Chronic pain can be challenging to treat. Sometimes, pain remains, even after the original injury heals. When conservative treatments produce insufficient results, it may mean stronger drugs in larger doses or surgery with a relatively low chance of success. 

At BioHealth Pain Management, Dr. Rostam Khoshar and Dr. Adrian Darryll Sulin offer a full spectrum of pain relief treatments and procedures, including radiofrequency ablation (RFA). When conservative remedies fail to relieve pain in your back, hips, knees, or shoulders, RFA may be the answer. Creating pinpoint heat in a method similar to microwaves, RFA selectively disrupts pain transmissions from sensory nerves, reducing pain long-term. 

The challenges of chronic pain

While there are plenty of treatments for pain, particularly with medications, chronic pain introduces a series of challenges. 

Most medicinal pain relievers work best as short-term solutions. Your body can build resistance to the pain-relieving properties of many drugs, requiring higher dosages or more potent medications. This is one factor that contributed to the opioid epidemic. 

Conservative techniques are often less effective overall, requiring combinations of treatments that may still come up short, relying on pain meds and their escalating side effects. RFA offers a minimally invasive, long-term pain relief approach that works when other treatments fail. 

Radiofrequency ablation

The energy produced by a radiofrequency field excites water molecules and heats tissue like microwaves heat food. In chronic pain, RFA (radiofrequency neurotomy) targets sensory nerve tissue in problem areas, destroying local nerve tissue and stopping the transmission of pain sensations to the brain. 

During the RFA procedure, a tiny hollow needle delivers an electrode to the target area. Once activated, heat creates a lesion on the nerve, sending objectionable pain signals. With the nerve tissue disrupted, the pain signals end. 

While your body may regenerate nerve tissue, you should enjoy reduced or eliminated levels of pain. 

The duration of pain relief varies widely, anywhere from six months to several years. In some cases, pain may be reduced but not eliminated. You may still require pain medications but in lower quantities. 

The benefits of RFA

Pain relief is the most significant benefit of an RFA procedure. Before you undergo this process, we confirm the nerve or nerves involved by injecting a pain block. If this injection relieves your chronic pain, you’ll likely benefit from the RFA to turn off pain signals at the source. 

Other advantages of RFA include: 

Pain relief may be immediate or take up to 10 days before you feel significant improvements. If your pain returns later, we can repeat the RFA procedure. 

Consult with an expert at BioHealth Pain Management to learn more about RFA and how it can help your chronic pain condition. We have three convenient offices in Hawthorne, Arcadia, and Whittier, CA. Call or click to make an appointment today.

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