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I've done it 4 times, so I'm not exactly Mr. RegenMed, but yes, every time. My steroid injections last 3-6 months on average with a waning relief over time, SI RFA lasts about 6mo to a year, SI PRP hasn't needed any repeats since my first in May of this year (5 months). Still zero pain in the SI joints on everyone.
Just be honest. I tell them about good evidence in knees and tennis elbow. Mixed results elsewhere, hard to study, etc. Choose appropriate patients. Most people who opt for RegenMed either want to avoid steroids (osteoporosis/old age) or care much more about long-term relief than a cheap bandaid.I got a few pts I've considered offering it to but I'm going to hate myself if I end up stealing $500 from them.
Just be honest. I tell them about good evidence in knees and tennis elbow. Mixed results elsewhere, hard to study, etc. Choose appropriate patients. Most people who opt for RegenMed either want to avoid steroids (osteoporosis/old age) or care much more about long-term relief than a cheap bandaid.
If you're worried about $500, think of it this way. Medicare pays roughly $246 for an in office B/L SI joint. Do that twice and you're at $500.
If you believe the SI joint is the primary pain source , why not go “all in” with SI Bone(ie SI fusion)? Vs q 5 months of PRP. Sounds like your patient’s options are limited, and they have the resources to embark on this journey.I've done it 4 times, so I'm not exactly Mr. RegenMed, but yes, every time. My steroid injections last 3-6 months on average with a waning relief over time, SI RFA lasts about 6mo to a year, SI PRP hasn't needed any repeats since my first in May of this year (5 months). Still zero pain in the SI joints on everyone.
yes, except... patients using Medicare to cover their procedures aren't pulling that money out of their wallet and away from their budget...Just be honest. I tell them about good evidence in knees and tennis elbow. Mixed results elsewhere, hard to study, etc. Choose appropriate patients. Most people who opt for RegenMed either want to avoid steroids (osteoporosis/old age) or care much more about long-term relief than a cheap bandaid.
If you're worried about $500, think of it this way. Medicare pays roughly $246 for an in office B/L SI joint. Do that twice and you're at $500.
Risk/Benefit is why.If you believe the SI joint is the primary pain source , why not go “all in” with SI Bone(ie SI fusion)? Vs q 5 months of PRP. Sounds like your patient’s options are limited, and they have the resources to embark on this journey.
I don’t personally recommend this surgical option, but maybe your patient may consider it ....
Correct ... that’s why early in one’s career you avoid offering esoteric options such as SI fusions and mesenchymal stem cells q3-6 months. You will have fair outcomes, bad reviews, and scant patient/family referrals .SI fusions do nothing more than cause pain.
Some CD34+ Cells... if you're lucky.True, but I wouldn't equate stem cells with PRP.
Strongly encourage both the NANS fellow course AND the new attending course. Beware though, you'll be forced underneath a torrential downfall of lies and deception, but it is still good to see different people's methodology for entry point, approach angles, closure, etc...Tons of nuances and there are 50x ways to do good SCS work.
It is a GOOD treatment for failed back with persistent radic and very good at CRPS. Those are the most common Dx you'll implant/trial. Failed back is far and away the most common for me (two spine surgeons in my group and I'm the only guy doing SCS).
I do SCS for FBSS and the pt only has back pain and it simply is unreliable. You'll take out 80% of the implants you do for that Dx.
What do you mean by “torrential downfall of lies and deception”?
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