Dr Monica Chogle
Rapid access to specialist pain consultants, providing expert advice and treatments for chronic neuropathic pain, including sciatica, post-surgical pain, and diabetic neuropathy
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People who suffer from neuropathic pain typically describe a very severe, intense pain which is relentless, burning, sharp, stabbing or electric shock-like in character. The damaged nerves frequently demonstrate impaired function with disability. Hypersensitive of the affected area can often be experienced. This intense, relentless nerve pain frequently leads to distress, anxiety and even depression.
It is common for nerve pain to appear in many forms and often goes misdiagnosed and mistreated.
At Kingsbridge, you’ll be in the expert hands of the UK and Ireland’s top pain consultants.
There are numerous varieties of chronic neuropathic pain. These are the most common types seen:
Sciatica
Post Surgical Pain
Postherpetic Neuralgia
Trigeminal Neuralgia
Phantom Limb Pain
Diabetic Neuropathy
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Occipital Neuralgia
Central pain syndrome
Neuropathic pain is not normal pain and does not tend to respond to normal pain killers. Your specialist will do a full assessment and recommend a plan for therapy that best suits your needs.
Your specialist will discuss options available to you to help you make the best choice for your particular pain and needs.
Pharmacotherapy
This type of pain is usually best treated with medication, as this lead to greater independence for the sufferer. The two main groups of drugs used to treat this pain are the anti-epileptic drugs (AED’s) and tricyclic antidepressants (TCI’s). These are very specialist drugs and your pain specialist will be experiences in prescribing these. Paracetamol, anti-inflammatory drugs and opioid based pain killers tend not to be so effective for this type of pain.
Procedures
Various interventional treatments can aid the management of neuropathic pain, including:
– Epidural injections for sciatica (Usually both sides)
– Nerve root injections / transforaminal epidural injections (Usually one side)
– Peripheral nerve blocks
– Botox injections – usually for migraine. Also for neuropathic skin pain
– Spinal cord stimulators
– Radiofrequency treatments for scar pain or trigeminal neuralgia
– Pulsed radiofrequency treatments