Techniques in Regional Anesthesia & Pain Management
Volume 9, Issue 2 , Pages 81-85, April 2005

Cervical facet radiofrequency

  • Ricardo Vallejo, MD, PhD (FIPP)

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests and correspondence: Ricardo Vallejo, MD, PhD, FIPP, Millennium Pain Center, 1015 S. Mercer Ave., Bloomington, IL 61701.

Millenium Pain Center, Bloomington, Illinois; and Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois.

The use of electricity to treat painful conditions is not novel in medicine. Initially, direct current was used to create lesions of the nerves, but the unpredictable results lead to the adoption of alternating current. Current radiofrequency generators allow us to locate the target nerve, decrease the chance of unwanted nerve damage, and control temperature in the surrounding tissues. The cervical facets commonly cause cervicogenic headaches or cervicobrachialgia. The medial branches of the cervical dorsal rami innervate the facets and are easily accessible for radiofrequency, with the addition of fluoroscopy. Two modalities of radiofrequency are currently available. The traditional neurolytic technique creates high temperatures around the tip of the needle burning the target tissues, while pulse radiofrequency creates an electrical field around the nerve, that modulates nerve conduction while preventing nerve damage. We describe the most common technical approaches to perform the above mentioned procedures, with a rationale to decide why and when to perform pulse radiofrequency or neurolysis.

Keywords:  Medial branch , Pulse radiofrequency , Neurolysis

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PII: S1084-208X(05)00038-8

doi:10.1053/j.trap.2005.05.006

Techniques in Regional Anesthesia & Pain Management
Volume 9, Issue 2 , Pages 81-85, April 2005