301. Bipolar Radiofrequency Facet Ablation of the Lumbar Facet Capsule: An Adjunct to Conventional Radiofrequency Ablation for Pain Management
- Author
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Michelle Granville, Robert E Jacobson, and Ovidiu Palea
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,Facet (geometry) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation ,facet joint degeneration ,Radiofrequency ablation ,medicine.drug_class ,medicine.medical_treatment ,lumbar facet capsule thermocoagulation ,pain control ,lumbar facet osteoarthritis ,law.invention ,Facet joint ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Lumbar ,law ,Anesthesiology ,facet joint pain ,Medicine ,Pain Management ,Bipolar radiofrequency ,030212 general & internal medicine ,radiofrequency facet ablation ,business.industry ,Local anesthetic ,General Engineering ,Capsule ,Ablation ,musculoskeletal system ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Radiology ,facet cysts ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,lumbar facet cysts - Abstract
Radiofrequency facet ablation (RFA) has been performed using the same technique for over 50 years. Except for variations in electrode size, tip shape, and change in radiofrequency (RF) stimulation parameters, using standard, pulsed, and cooled RF wavelengths, the target points have remained absolutely unchanged from the original work describing RFA for lumbar pain control. Degenerative changes in the facet joint and capsule are the primary location for the majority of lumbar segmental pathology and pain. Multiple studies show that the degenerated facet joint is richly innervated as a result of the inflammatory overgrowth of the synovium. The primary provocative clinical test to justify an RFA is to perform an injection with local anesthetic into the facet joint and the posterior capsule and confirm pain relief. However, after a positive response, the radiofrequency lesion is made not to the facet joint but to the more proximal fine nerve branches that innervate the joint. The accepted target points for the recurrent sensory branch ignore the characteristic rich innervation of the pathologic lumbar facet capsule and assume that lesioning of these recurrent branches is sufficient to denervate the painful pathologic facet joint. This report describes the additional targets and technical steps for further coagulation points along the posterior capsule of the lumbar facet joint and the physiologic studies of the advantage of the bipolar radiofrequency current in this location. Bipolar RF to the facet capsule is a simple, extra step that easily creates a large thermo-coagulated lesion in this capsule region of the pathologic facet joint. Early studies demonstrate bipolar RF to the facet capsule can provide long-term pain relief when used alone for specific localized facet joint pain, to coagulate lumbar facet cysts to prevent recurrence, and to get more extensive pain control by combining it with traditional lumbar RFA, especially when RFA is repeated.
- Published
- 2017