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Prolotherapy and
Pain
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Prolotherapy
is a word that is derived from proliferant and therapy. The
therapy results because the proliferation occurs in the cells
of the tendons and ligaments.
Pain
is caused by looseness or laxity of the ligaments and tendons,
if the pain is chronic. Proliferation of the cells of the
tendons and ligaments makes them tighter, bigger, and stronger.
Proliferation
causes tighter ligaments and tendons which gets rid of the pain
in about 80 to 90% of chronic or recurring cases! Only
prolotherapy will tighten the ligaments and tendons.
Tendons
are what muscles taper down into at each end. Ligaments
are tough fibrous tissues that hold bones and joints together.
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How is
Prolotherapy Done?
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Dextrose
(sugar) is the proliferant used in most cases. A concentration
of 12.5% dextrose causes an inflammatory reaction in the tendons
and ligaments. Inflammation results in the proliferation
of the cells. As the body heals the inflammation, the ligament
and tendons tighten. Getting rid of the looseness starts
the pain resolution process.
Tightening
usually is a step process. Average prolotherapy patients
need a series of four (4) dextrose injections into the tendons
and ligaments that are loose.
Healing
the inflammatory response caused by dextrose takes time. Six
(6) weeks are allowed usually between injections at the same
site. Pain that is diffuse, such as is seen in fibromyalgia,
usually requires weekly or daily sessions to inject all of the
tender ligaments and tendons.
Injection
of the dextrose is done where the tendons and ligaments attach
to the bone. One of the cardinal rules of prolotherapy
is that the proliferant is never injected unless the needle is
on bone. This is to prevent the chance of injecting into
structures such as blood vessels.
Discomfort
due to the injection varies from patient to patient. Most
people are premedicated with three (3) hydrocodone (Vicodin,
Lorcet) and one (1) mg. alprazolam (Xanax). The medicines
are taken an hour or two before the prolotherapy so the injections
are more comfortable. Many patients prefer to not be premedicated.
Patients
already on these types of medications may need even higher doses. Those
with high tolerances for pain may choose to not be premedicated. Pain
is the number one side effect of the injections. This is
a no pain no gain situation. Focus on the big picture! 80
to 90% of chronic pain responds to prolotherapy! The number one
thing patients tell me is that prolotherapy was not as bad as
they thought it would be.
Once
the pain is eliminated, most of the time it does not recur. Later,
if more prolotherapy is needed one series is usually adequate,
as opposed to the average four series initially.
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What are
the Risks?
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As
the injection is done, there is discomfort in the skin and where
the tip of the needle touches the bone. Pain is the biggest
risk of prolotherapy. Soreness for several days after the
injections is common. Also, at about two to three weeks,
there may be a flare of pain; probably because the tendons and
ligaments are starting to tighten from the proliferation of the
cells and healing of the inflammation.
Do
not take anti-inflammatory medications such as ibuprofen or steroids
like cortisone or prednisone. It is better to take acetaminophen.
Infection
and swelling are risks. After about forty years with over
10,000 patients and over one million injections, Gustav Hemwall,
MD, never had an infection. Dr. Hemwall had an international
practice! That gives an idea about the effectiveness of
pain relief and safety!
If
the needle were to touch the spinal canal, there might be leakage
of spinal fluid with a headache. This is brief and is resolved
by lying down usually.
Injections
are not done unless the needle is on bone. The angle of
the injections is away from the head to minimize risks of touching
the spinal canal. There has only been one death in the
history of prolotherapy, and that was in 1959. The doctor
broke two rules, by not using the standard proliferant at that
time, and the injection was into the spinal canal. The
needle was not on bone! The chances of seizure and death
are extremely small if the prolotherapy rules are followed.
Pneumothorax
is a collapsed lung. If the needle tip were to touch the
lung, a pneumothorax may result. Small needles are used
in prolotherapy, so the pneumothorax may be able to be treated
out of the hospital, if it is a partial collapse, with observation. The
body heals and reinflates the lung. If the pneumothorax
is more extensive, hospitalization may be required and a chest
tube placed by a surgeon for reinflation of the lung.
Nerves
may be touched by the tip of the needle. This may produce
a pins and needles (zinger) sensation, or feeling hot and painful
with radiation down an arm or leg. This is usually transient,
and the direction of the injections is changed slightly to avoid
the nerve.
Blood
vessels may be made to bleed. Bruising may result. Patients
may pass out briefly or be light-headed.
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What is
the cost?
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Many
insurance companies pay for prolotherapy. If your insurance
company will not, there are insurance packets with articles and
copies of letters from other insurance companies that do pay. Once
insurance companies figure out how much cheaper prolotherapy
is than surgery, it will become the initial treatment. It
has a greater success rate and is a lot safer, in my opinion.
Savings
would also be astronomical in all of the people that avoid disability. Rehabilitation
efforts are greatly enhances by pain resolution. There
would be less accidents cause by pain medications and drowsiness,
and less drug abuse and addiction.
Overall,
there would be no cost to society, just savings. If one
joint is injected one time, the cost would start at about $200.00. If
patients have fibromyalgia, and sore tendons and ligaments all
over the body, the cost may be $1,000 to $1,500 for a series. This
might require four sessions of one hour. Focal pains, like
migraine headaches or back trouble costs less. Spinal (neck
or back) prolo usually costs about $2,000.00 to $2,500.00 per
series. |