amanda_lodden: (Default)
[personal profile] amanda_lodden
Saw the pain management doctor today. Despite my irritation at how long I had to wait for the appointment (why, WHY on earth would an office specializing in pain management make someone wait nearly a week for an appointment? I called for an appointment last Thursday!), I really like the doctor. He coddled my inner techno-geek by going over the MRI films with me, explaining what I was seeing and which specific pictures contained the problem, which is so amazingly cool I can't begin to explain it. We discussed drug options (I'm allergic to codeine, Darvocet makes me unpleasantly loopy and it's pretty much the weakest narcotic there is, and the only non-narcotic non-over-the-counter pain medicine gives me migraines that are worse than the pain it masks), treatment options, and he was understanding about the fact that I'm going to fly to California then get in a truck and drive across country next week come hell or high water. His only response to that was "Well, I would normally have you come back to this office on Monday for treatment, but I don't think you should fly the day after, so we'll set you up with an appointment for an epidural at the Bloomfield Hills office tomorrow instead."

The upshot is that tomorrow I will get jabbed in the back with a large needle full of steroids. It's intended to help heal the bulging disc rather than to control the immediate pain, and because the pain stems from pressure on the nerve and the injection will put more fluid into the thing putting the pressure on the nerve, there is a possibility of even more pain for two to three days afterward as the disc heals. (Hence the "It's not a good idea to fly right afterward.") Once that pain subsides, it should take a lot of the existing pain with it (in a real, heal-the-underlying-problem manner, rather than in a mask-the-pain-so-you-don't-feel-it manner), and it should make the cross-country trip substantially more pleasant.

When the doctor described the procedure, he indicated that it would be a local anesthetic and "pressure" with the potential for some pain during the actual injection, which would take about 30 seconds, maybe a minute at the outside. When I went to set up the appointment, though, the nurse(?) asked if I wanted to be sedated. Given a choice... yes. The upside is that there will be no pain during the injection, and probably not for many hours afterward. The downside is that I can't have anything to eat or drink after midnight, so I had to choose between getting up early or starving. With my Hobbit-like attitude towards food, I took the "be here by 7:45am" appointment.

Wish me luck!
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January 2015

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