| Thoracic
Facet Joint Injection Information:
What are the thoracic facet joints, and why are facet
joint injections helpful?
Thoracic facet joints are small joints about the size of your
thumb nails located in pairs on the back of your mid-spine.
They provide stability and guide motion in your mid-back.
When the joints become painful they may cause pain in back,
ribs, chest or abdomen.
A facet joint injection serves several purposes. First, by
placing numbing medicine into the joint, the amount of immediate
pain relief you experience will help confirm or deny the joint
as a source of your pain. Additionally, the temporary pain
relief of the numbing medicine may better allow a physical
therapist or chiropractor to treat that joint. Also, time
release cortisone will serve to reduce any presumed inflammation
within your joint and further assist the physical therapist
or chiropractor, if necessary. It is possible to obtain relief
from the injection alone without follow-up physical therapy
or chiropractic care.
What will happen to me during the procedure?
An IV will be started so that relaxation medicine can be given.
After lying on a table, the skin over your back will be well
cleaned. Next, the physician will numb a small area of skin
with numbing medicine which stings for a few seconds. Next,
the physician will use x-ray guidance to direct a very small
needle into the joint, and then he will inject several drops
of contrast dye to confirm that the medicine goes into the
joint. Then, a small mixture of numbing medicine (anesthetic)
and anti-inflammatory cortisone will be slowly injected.
What should I do after the procedure?
Immediately afterwards you will move your neck and try to
provoke your usual pain. You will report your percentage of
pain relief and also record the relief you experience during
the next week on a "pain diary" we will provide
to you. Mail the completed pain diary back to Tyler Neurological
Associates and we will contact you when we receive your diary.
You should not drive for eight hours following this procedure.
On rare occasion, your chest wall may feel numb for a few
hours. You may be referred to a physical therapist or chiropractor
immediately afterwards while the numbing medicine is effective
and over the next two weeks while the cortisone is working.
General Pre/Post Instructions
You should eat a light, but not a full meal at least 2 hours
before the procedure. If you are an insulin dependent diabetic
do not alter your normal food intake. Take your routine medications
before the procedure (such as high blood pressure and diabetes
medications) except stop aspirin and all anti-inflammatory
medications (e.g. Motrin/Ibuprofen, Aleve, Relafen, Daypro)
3 days before the procedure. These medicines may be re-started
the day after the procedure. You may take your regular pain
medicine as needed before/after the procedure. If you are
on coumadin, heparin, lovenex, plavix or ticlid you must notify
our office so that the timing of stopping these medications
can be explained. If you are on antibiotics please notify
our office, we may wait to do the procedure. If you have an
active infection or fever we will not do the procedure. You
will be in the hospital as an out-patient for 2-3 hours even
though you see the physician for 20 minutes. You will need
to bring a driver with you. You may return to your current
level of activities the next day including return to work.
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