Center for Pain Medicine, P.A. https://centerforpainfargo.com Fri, 29 Oct 2021 18:00:45 +0000 en hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.4 Neuromodulation Therapy Helps Debilitating Menstrual Cramps https://centerforpainfargo.com/neuromodulation-therapy-helps-debilitating-menstrual-cramps-2/ https://centerforpainfargo.com/neuromodulation-therapy-helps-debilitating-menstrual-cramps-2/#respond Mon, 05 Oct 2020 23:02:13 +0000 https://centerforpainfargo.com/?p=2781

Amber Fable’s debilitating cramps petrified her during her “time of the month.”

Starting in 2010, Fable struggled with menstrual pain that registered to the power of 10. After being diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome, she sought a second opinion.

The doctor told Fable, then 24, that she had the worst case of endometriosis he had ever seen.

Fable is among the 6.5 million Americans with endometriosis. According to the Office on Women’s Health, this long-term condition occurs when tissue similar to the lining inside the womb grows outside the womb and other areas where it does not belong. It can cause inflammation, scar tissue and adhesions as well as cause problems in the bladder and intestines.

Over the next five years, Fable tried several treatments to combat pain. She underwent laparoscopic surgery, followed by one year of lupron injections, then yearly ablation surgery to burn off endometriosis.

“I went from being so active to a barely-get-out-of-bed person who needed narcotics,” Fable says.

Fable moved from California to Fargo, N.D., in 2016 to get a fresh start. When she turned 30, she decided she wanted to try to have a child. Against all odds, she and her partner, Kristoffer, welcomed their son, Theo, in November 2017. Fable became a stay-at-home mom and underwent two painful nerve blocks to try to manage her relentless pain.

In June 2019, Fable opted for excision surgery to cut the endometriosis out of her body. For the next six months, her pain dipped from a constant 10 to a seven. And Fable started a new job (with heavy weight restrictions) at Club Kids, a drop-in daycare in Fargo.

She remembered seeing the construction of the Center for Pain Medicine in South Fargo on her work commute in 2016. Betting the new facility would have the latest in pain medicine, Fable met with Dr. Majid Ghazi, a board-certified anesthesiologist and interventional pain physician.

Ghazi performed a thorough examination and offered Fable a new treatment option: neuromodulation therapy.

This therapy uses implanted medical device technology to interrupt or modify the pain signals originating from the spinal area before the brain is able to interpret the message. It provides greater pain control than narcotics and eliminates common opioid side effects such as constipation, drowsiness and mental cloudiness.

“Chronic abdominal and pelvic pain is a very complex condition, which at times can be extremely difficult to treat,” Ghazi says. “Conservative and surgical treatments are usually associated with mixed results. Recent studies have shown spinal cord stimulation is a highly effective option to treat this condition.”

The surgery is a two-part procedure. First, a trial run is performed in a sterile environment, where (wire) leads are placed through the skin and up the spinal column. Patients are under intravenous sedation, known as conscious sedation. Staff from Boston Scientific, the company that manufactures the device, programs the equipment.

Fable underwent the trial in March 2020 and experienced her first five pain-free days in a decade. She even got down on her hands and knees and cleaned tile with a toothbrush.

After Covid-19 restrictions were lifted, Fable underwent the implantation in May 2020.

“I am virtually pain-free, except for the normal pains of a 33-year-old,” Fable says.

“I went from having 10-out-of-10 pain for the last decade—a shadow of my former self—to having my life given back to me by a device the size of a silver dollar,” Fable says.

Read more about regenerative treatment therapies available at Center For Pain Fargo or call 701-551-6980 to schedule your consultation.

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Neuromodulation Therapy Helps Debilitating Menstrual Cramps https://centerforpainfargo.com/neuromodulation-therapy-helps-debilitating-menstrual-cramps/ https://centerforpainfargo.com/neuromodulation-therapy-helps-debilitating-menstrual-cramps/#respond Mon, 05 Oct 2020 23:02:13 +0000 https://centerforpainfargo.com/?p=2781

Amber Fable’s debilitating cramps petrified her during her “time of the month.”

Starting in 2010, Fable struggled with menstrual pain that registered to the power of 10. After being diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome, she sought a second opinion.

The doctor told Fable, then 24, that she had the worst case of endometriosis he had ever seen.

Fable is among the 6.5 million Americans with endometriosis. According to the Office on Women’s Health, this long-term condition occurs when tissue similar to the lining inside the womb grows outside the womb and other areas where it does not belong. It can cause inflammation, scar tissue and adhesions as well as cause problems in the bladder and intestines.

Over the next five years, Fable tried several treatments to combat pain. She underwent laparoscopic surgery, followed by one year of lupron injections, then yearly ablation surgery to burn off endometriosis.

“I went from being so active to a barely-get-out-of-bed person who needed narcotics,” Fable says.

Fable moved from California to Fargo, N.D., in 2016 to get a fresh start. When she turned 30, she decided she wanted to try to have a child. Against all odds, she and her partner, Kristoffer, welcomed their son, Theo, in November 2017. Fable became a stay-at-home mom and underwent two painful nerve blocks to try to manage her relentless pain.

In June 2019, Fable opted for excision surgery to cut the endometriosis out of her body. For the next six months, her pain dipped from a constant 10 to a seven. And Fable started a new job (with heavy weight restrictions) at Club Kids, a drop-in daycare in Fargo.

She remembered seeing the construction of the Center for Pain Medicine in South Fargo on her work commute in 2016. Betting the new facility would have the latest in pain medicine, Fable met with Dr. Majid Ghazi, a board-certified anesthesiologist and interventional pain physician.

Ghazi performed a thorough examination and offered Fable a new treatment option: neuromodulation therapy.

This therapy uses implanted medical device technology to interrupt or modify the pain signals originating from the spinal area before the brain is able to interpret the message. It provides greater pain control than narcotics and eliminates common opioid side effects such as constipation, drowsiness and mental cloudiness.

“Chronic abdominal and pelvic pain is a very complex condition, which at times can be extremely difficult to treat,” Ghazi says. “Conservative and surgical treatments are usually associated with mixed results. Recent studies have shown spinal cord stimulation is a highly effective option to treat this condition.”

The surgery is a two-part procedure. First, a trial run is performed in a sterile environment, where (wire) leads are placed through the skin and up the spinal column. Patients are under intravenous sedation, known as conscious sedation. Staff from Boston Scientific, the company that manufactures the device, programs the equipment.

Fable underwent the trial in March 2020 and experienced her first five pain-free days in a decade. She even got down on her hands and knees and cleaned tile with a toothbrush.

After Covid-19 restrictions were lifted, Fable underwent the implantation in May 2020.

“I am virtually pain-free, except for the normal pains of a 33-year-old,” Fable says.

“I went from having 10-out-of-10 pain for the last decade—a shadow of my former self—to having my life given back to me by a device the size of a silver dollar,” Fable says.

Read more patient stories.

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Neuromodulation Therapy Relieves Low Back Pain https://centerforpainfargo.com/neuromodulation-therapy-relieves-low-back-pain-2/ https://centerforpainfargo.com/neuromodulation-therapy-relieves-low-back-pain-2/#respond Mon, 05 Oct 2020 23:01:10 +0000 https://centerforpainfargo.com/?p=2799

Finding hope in the midst of pain

Brent Gillund hurried down the stairs to meet with his doctoral advisor one August afternoon in 2000 at the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks. He slipped on the top step, falling six feet over four steps. And landed on his tailbone.

That one misstep would lead to seven years of narcotic pain medication use to deal with the relentless pain in his legs and back. Pain that hovered at a five on a scale of one to 10, flaring to an eight.

Gillund, then 31, experienced annular tears and disc herniation in five discs in his lumbar region. Simply put, the spinal disc is like a jelly donut. The fall caused the “jelly” to leak out of the disc’s rubbery exterior, or annulus. As a result, his discs decompressed, irritating nearby nerves.

The National Institutes of Health reports tens of million Americans suffer from chronic pain.

Unable to continue his part-time job as a hospital orderly, Gillund became an adjunct instructor at an area college. He saw six doctors, including a pain management specialist, in the next seven years. Each doctor prescribed narcotics and encouraged him to lose weight. (He weighed 310 pounds at the time of the accident.) Gillund progressed from hydrocodone, to percocet, to oxycodone, followed by a fentanyl patch, to methadone.

The opioids left him groggy and provided no pain relief. Life became more demanding as Gillund and his wife, Brenda Jo, welcomed twins in 2002. And he began a new position as a behavior management/education specialist at a psychiatric hospital in Grand Forks.

His weight crept up to 340 pounds. Pain disrupted his sleep, and Gillund resorted to sleeping in his recliner.

Gillund underwent intradiscal electrothermal therapy, IDET, on two discs in 2004. This procedure basically cauterizes the nerve endings within the disc wall to help block the pain signals. Gillund gained some relief. But he was still on narcotics for the other three discs.

By 2007, Gillund was fed up with the narcotics and carefully weaned himself off methadone. He met with his pain management specialist to “fire” him. That’s when the specialist encouraged Gillund to see Dr. Majid Ghazi, a board-certified anesthesiologist and interventional pain physician in Fargo.

Desperate for relief, Gillund scheduled an appointment. Ghazi performed a thorough examination. And then Ghazi said, “I think there is something we can try.”
That moment was “life-changing” for Gillund.

“Not having hope for so long, emotionally it was the possibility of having a huge weight being lifted off my shoulders,” Gillund says.

Neuromodulation therapy uses implanted medical device technology to interrupt or modify the pain signals originating from the spinal area before the brain is able to interpret the message.

Neuromodulation therapies provide greater pain control than narcotics. And they eliminate common opioid side effects such as constipation, drowsiness and mental cloudiness.

Spinal cord stimulator surgery is a two-part procedure. First, a trial run is performed in a sterile environment, where (wire) leads are placed through the skin and up the spinal column. Patients are under intravenous sedation, known as conscious sedation.

Gillund remembers waking from the trial procedure in full pain. Then he was handed the stimulator control. Gillund adjusted it until he felt no pain.
“I sobbed,” Gillund recalls “I was in control again. It was liberating.”

After the trial run, Ghazi determined Gillund was a candidate for permanent implantation of the device. Ghazi removed the temporary leads, and staff scheduled surgery after the trial area was completely healed.

Gillund underwent the implantation on August 22, 2007. Similar to a pacemaker, the spinal stimulator is battery operated device. Gillund’s first battery was a non-rechargeable unit and lasted three years. He received an upgrade with a rechargeable battery in 2010.

He describes 2007 as his “miracle year.” Bariatric surgery in December 2007 enabled Gillund to lose more than 100 pounds. The weight loss allowed him to back away from needing the stimulator every day.

Since 2016, Gillund has worked as the associate director of clinical operations at Axis Clinicals USA in Dilworth, Minn. He began his research career at PRACS Institute in East Grand Forks, Minn., in 2006. Gillund resides with his family in West Fargo, N.D.

And on the days when he feels pain, Gillund turns on the stimulator for an hour or two to get through the worst. “Before it was on 24/7,” he says. He describes the sensation as a “vibrating massager on the inside.”

“Never give up hope,” Gillund says. “Even when several doctors say there is nothing they can do, keep searching.”

“Dr. Ghazi saved my life,” Gillund adds. “He gave me hope when others didn’t. He gave me my life back. I will gladly shout it from the mountaintops. Thank you, Dr. Ghazi!”

In 2019 he underwent replacement of his spinal cord stimulator battery. “Never give up hope,” says. “Even when several doctors say there is nothing they can do, keep searching.”

Read more about regenerative treatment therapies available at Center For Pain Fargo or call 701-551-6980 to schedule your consultation.

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Neuromodulation Therapy Relieves Low Back Pain https://centerforpainfargo.com/neuromodulation-therapy-relieves-low-back-pain/ https://centerforpainfargo.com/neuromodulation-therapy-relieves-low-back-pain/#respond Mon, 05 Oct 2020 23:01:10 +0000 https://centerforpainfargo.com/?p=2799

Finding hope in the midst of pain

Brent Gillund hurried down the stairs to meet with his doctoral advisor one August afternoon in 2000 at the University of North Dakota in Grand Forks. He slipped on the top step, falling six feet over four steps. And landed on his tailbone.

That one misstep would lead to seven years of narcotic pain medication use to deal with the relentless pain in his legs and back. Pain that hovered at a five on a scale of one to 10, flaring to an eight.

Gillund, then 31, experienced annular tears and disc herniation in five discs in his lumbar region. Simply put, the spinal disc is like a jelly donut. The fall caused the “jelly” to leak out of the disc’s rubbery exterior, or annulus. As a result, his discs decompressed, irritating nearby nerves.

The National Institutes of Health reports tens of million Americans suffer from chronic pain.

Unable to continue his part-time job as a hospital orderly, Gillund became an adjunct instructor at an area college. He saw six doctors, including a pain management specialist, in the next seven years. Each doctor prescribed narcotics and encouraged him to lose weight. (He weighed 310 pounds at the time of the accident.) Gillund progressed from hydrocodone, to percocet, to oxycodone, followed by a fentanyl patch, to methadone.

The opioids left him groggy and provided no pain relief. Life became more demanding as Gillund and his wife, Brenda Jo, welcomed twins in 2002. And he began a new position as a behavior management/education specialist at a psychiatric hospital in Grand Forks.

His weight crept up to 340 pounds. Pain disrupted his sleep, and Gillund resorted to sleeping in his recliner.

Gillund underwent intradiscal electrothermal therapy, IDET, on two discs in 2004. This procedure basically cauterizes the nerve endings within the disc wall to help block the pain signals. Gillund gained some relief. But he was still on narcotics for the other three discs.

By 2007, Gillund was fed up with the narcotics and carefully weaned himself off methadone. He met with his pain management specialist to “fire” him. That’s when the specialist encouraged Gillund to see Dr. Majid Ghazi, a board-certified anesthesiologist and interventional pain physician in Fargo.

Desperate for relief, Gillund scheduled an appointment. Ghazi performed a thorough examination. And then Ghazi said, “I think there is something we can try.”
That moment was “life-changing” for Gillund.

“Not having hope for so long, emotionally it was the possibility of having a huge weight being lifted off my shoulders,” Gillund says.

Neuromodulation therapy uses implanted medical device technology to interrupt or modify the pain signals originating from the spinal area before the brain is able to interpret the message.

Neuromodulation therapies provide greater pain control than narcotics. And they eliminate common opioid side effects such as constipation, drowsiness and mental cloudiness.

Spinal cord stimulator surgery is a two-part procedure. First, a trial run is performed in a sterile environment, where (wire) leads are placed through the skin and up the spinal column. Patients are under intravenous sedation, known as conscious sedation.

Gillund remembers waking from the trial procedure in full pain. Then he was handed the stimulator control. Gillund adjusted it until he felt no pain.
“I sobbed,” Gillund recalls “I was in control again. It was liberating.”

After the trial run, Ghazi determined Gillund was a candidate for permanent implantation of the device. Ghazi removed the temporary leads, and staff scheduled surgery after the trial area was completely healed.

Gillund underwent the implantation on August 22, 2007. Similar to a pacemaker, the spinal stimulator is battery operated device. Gillund’s first battery was a non-rechargeable unit and lasted three years. He received an upgrade with a rechargeable battery in 2010.

He describes 2007 as his “miracle year.” Bariatric surgery in December 2007 enabled Gillund to lose more than 100 pounds. The weight loss allowed him to back away from needing the stimulator every day.

Since 2016, Gillund has worked as the associate director of clinical operations at Axis Clinicals USA in Dilworth, Minn. He began his research career at PRACS Institute in East Grand Forks, Minn., in 2006. Gillund resides with his family in West Fargo, N.D.

And on the days when he feels pain, Gillund turns on the stimulator for an hour or two to get through the worst. “Before it was on 24/7,” he says. He describes the sensation as a “vibrating massager on the inside.”

“Never give up hope,” Gillund says. “Even when several doctors say there is nothing they can do, keep searching.”

“Dr. Ghazi saved my life,” Gillund adds. “He gave me hope when others didn’t. He gave me my life back. I will gladly shout it from the mountaintops. Thank you, Dr. Ghazi!”

In 2019 he underwent replacement of his spinal cord stimulator battery. “Never give up hope,” says. “Even when several doctors say there is nothing they can do, keep searching.”

Read more patient stories.

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Wireless Peripheral Nerve Stimulation Relieves Upper Back Pain https://centerforpainfargo.com/wireless-peripheral-nerve-stimulation-relieves-upper-back-pain/ https://centerforpainfargo.com/wireless-peripheral-nerve-stimulation-relieves-upper-back-pain/#respond Mon, 05 Oct 2020 23:00:01 +0000 https://centerforpainfargo.com/?p=2793

Physical therapist Tanya Couture remembers catching a falling patient. And feeling something “snap’ in her back.

The career-ending injury in 2006 set Couture, then 27, on a quest to find pain relief. Couture tried months of physical therapy. An MRI performed at Mayo Clinic in 2009 revealed a complete rhomboid muscle tear in her upper right back. Unfortunately, the accumulation of scar tissue made it impossible to surgically repair the tear without damaging surrounding muscles.

Saddled with a 10-pound weight restriction, life was difficult for Couture who resided in Valley City, N.D., with her husband, Chad, and their two young children. On a scale of one to 10, her pain was an eight. She fell into a hard depression.

“Pain sucks the life out of you,” Couture says.

Couture earned a bachelor’s degree in social work from Bresnia University in 2012. When work-related driving proved too painful for Couture, her husband purchased a clothing store in 2013 for her to manage.

Throughout the years, Couture has consulted with 13 different doctors, receiving trigger point injections, cortisone injections and numerous nerve and spinal blocks. Since 2011, her monthly prescription drug bill has averaged $3,000. And for the past seven years, she’s received trigger point injections every 11 weeks, roughly $8,000 each visit. Thankfully, insurance covered most of it.

Opioids provided meager relief while wreaking havoc in her stomach, liver, eyes, kidneys and bowels. When Couture’s eyesight became threatened, she determined to find a drug-free solution. As a new grandmother, she wanted to see her granddaughter grow up.

Friends suggested the Center for Pain Medicine in Fargo and Couture researched it online. She was almost deterred by the painful 60-minute drive from Valley City. But Couture’s desire to get off the opioids was stronger than her dread of pain.

In October 2019, Couture met with Center’s Dr. Dustin Goetz, a board-certified anesthesiologist and interventional pain physician. The Center, founded by Dr. Majid Ghazi in 2014, promotes the development and practice of safe, high-quality, and cost-effective interventional pain management procedures for diagnosis and treatment of spine and joint-related pain disorders.

Goetz performed a thorough examination and recommended wireless periphery nerve stimulation. In this outpatient procedure, one or two wires with four to eight electrodes are implanted near the damaged nerve to interrupt pain signals. Goetz explained Couture would need to modify her lifestyle for the treatment and continue to follow the 10-pound weight restriction.

“Wireless peripheral nerve stimulation is a novel technique to relieve pain caused by a damaged peripheral nerve–such as intercostal, dorsal scapular, ilioinguinal, among others–resulting in chest wall pain, back pain or pelvic pain,” Ghazi says. “The procedure is very safe. The effect is almost immediate, and the success rate is high.”

A trial is performed to determine whether it will bring the desired results. Couture would need to be off oral pain medications for three months prior to the trial. After she was drug-free for four weeks, Goetz performed a nerve block to determine which nerves innervated her right rhomboid area.

“He was the first doctor who looked at and targeted the problem,” Couture says.

Couture underwent the trial in January 2020 in the Center’s in-house operating room in a sterile environment. Staff from Stimware, the company that manufactures the device, programmed the equipment.

In the procedure, wire-like electrode leads are placed through a needle into the skin next to the damaged peripheral nerves. The electrode, or stimulator receiver, works with a wearable antenna, which is clipped to clothing, next to the skin. The wearable antenna sends wireless electrical pulses through the skin and into the stimulator receiver. The receiver, in turn, sends rapid electrical pulses to the nerves that feel like mild tingles. These pulses intercept and block pain signals. The amount of stimulation can be adjusted through a controller attached to the wearable antenna.

Goetz encouraged Couture to try things that she had not been able to do before. Couture shopped for two hours, went bowling (within the weight restriction), and cut her own steak. All without pain.

On February 10, 2020, Couture underwent the implantation. Today, Couture possesses stamina to operate their family businesses, and cherishes watching her granddaughter’s growth.

“It’s unbelievable,” Couture says. “I literally thought living in pain was my destiny. It’s given me a whole new outlook.”

“Some days are hard; don’t get me wrong,” she adds.

Even so, Couture says, “This little piece of equipment could be life-changing for a lot of people.”

Read more patient stories.

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Plantar Fasciitis Treated With PRP https://centerforpainfargo.com/plantar-fasciitis-treated-with-prp/ https://centerforpainfargo.com/plantar-fasciitis-treated-with-prp/#respond Tue, 06 Aug 2019 18:04:44 +0000 https://centerforpainfargo.com/?p=2403

Sarah Swanson dreaded her first step each morning.

The instant her right heel touched the floor, Swanson felt “an almost crippling pain.”

Just two years prior, she had finished her first marathon in Fargo in 2011. And she was training for her third, run-
ning up to 10 miles each day.

“After running, my heel would get really tight. I took a lot of Advil, six to eight pills a day, which is not healthy,” says Swanson, who works as the specialty shop manager at Scheels in Fargo, where she and her husband, Lee, reside with their boxers, Archer and Lana.

After her fourth Fargo Marathon in 2014, the thirty-some-thing Swanson sought a podiatrist.  She learned her pain had a name: plantar fasciitis.  This condition involves a painful inflammation of a thick band of tissue, known as the plantar fascia, that runs across the bottom of your foot and connects your heel bone to your toes.

Plantar fasciitis affects two million adults in the United States, according to the American Physical Therapy Association. Swanson’s intensive running and retail career, which requires standing for hours on hard floors, likely contributed to the condition.

At her podiatrist’s recommendation, she tried inserts in her shoes — first, over-the-counter inserts, and then custom-made. Neither provided relief.

While Swanson is no fan of needles, she agreed to a cortisone injection. Sadly, the relief lasted one week or two.  Her second injection six months later provided similar disappointing results.

Next, she began physical therapy, including the Graston technique, in which the therapist uses a stainless-steel tool to find restrictions and then scrape the tissue to break it up and restore use. Swanson describes that treatment as more painful than the cortisone injections.

“It helped a lot, until I started running,” says Swanson, who had reduced her daily runs to five miles.

Finally, she tried deep tissue massages weekly for the next six months. Still, no lasting relief.

After exhausting every treatment option, a discouraged Swanson searched the internet and learned about regenerative medicine. Many professional athletes, including Tiger Woods, as well as weekend warriors have turned to regenerative medicine to overcome injury.

Swanson discovered platelet rich plasma (PRP) therapy could be performed at Center for Pain Medicine in Fargo. She made an appointment to see Dr. Majid Ghazi, a board-certified anesthesiologist and interventional pain physician.

“He was very credible, very reassuring and he knew what he was doing,” Swanson says. Ghazi ordered an MRI of her foot to confirm the diagnosis of plantar fasciitis.

“Regenerative medicine is an area of medicine that utilizes the body’s own biologics to repair tissue injury and restore function,” Ghazi says. “PRP therapy is especially effective at reducing inflammation and speeding soft tissue healing.”

Unlike cortisone injections or surgery, PRP immediately triggers your body to heal itself. And patients often experience reduction in pain in four to six weeks.

Once again, Swanson faced her strong dislike of needles in her quest to be pain-free.

On July 11, 2018, Swanson underwent PRP therapy, an outpatient procedure, which is performed in the center’s in-house operating room in a sterile environment. Swanson’s blood was drawn and processed in a centrifuge, which isolates platelets and their growth factors. These
growth factors help injured tissue to heal faster. Ghazi then re-injected PRP into her foot at the site of the injury.

For the next two months, Swanson worked with a physical therapist from PT/OT Partners, which is housed in same building, to stretch and strengthen her heel to prepare it for running. And Swanson felt gradual pain relief within three months of PRP therapy.

“Although plantar fasciitis is a common problem, it can be difficult to treat,” Ghazi adds. “Cortisone injections can increase damage and surgery is not often an effective option. PRP therapy is a safe, little-known treatment that could help so many.”

Now, Swanson runs one to two days weekly—without pain. And she completed the half-marathon in the Twin Cities Marathon in October 2018. She’s incorporated variety to her workouts, adding indoor cycling and strength training.

She’s not the only one who is pleased with the results.  “My husband, Lee, is incredibly happy that he doesn’t have to listen to me complain about how much my foot hurts,” Swanson jokes.

Swanson plans to have PRP therapy on her left heel in the future. Because the treatment is not covered by insurance, she is saving up for it.

“When I think of how many things I tried and didn’t work, this is the one thing that gave me lasting relief,” Swanson says. “It’s natural, no drugs in my body, no side effects. It’s almost mind-blowing.”

Read more patient stories.

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Stem Cell / PRP Treatment Treats Osteoarthritis https://centerforpainfargo.com/stem-cell-prp-treatment-treats-osteoarthritis/ https://centerforpainfargo.com/stem-cell-prp-treatment-treats-osteoarthritis/#respond Wed, 12 Jun 2019 17:41:43 +0000 https://centerforpainfargo.com/?p=2076

Osteoarthritis in her hip and knee made it difficult to do what life demanded.

Mayer has battled knee pain for the past 10 years, undergoing cortisone injections, followed by knee arthroscopy, followed by more cortisone injections, without finding permanent relief. Last year, the pain in her hip reached the point where she sought cortisone injections.

“Experiencing chronic pain became a constant battle to fight the physical discomfort as well as the emotional side effects,” says Mayer, who works as a paraprofessional at Central Cass Elementary School in Casselton where she and her husband, Kevin, are empty nesters.

“Pain affected my mood, sleep and my relationships,” she adds.

The cortisone injection treatments were be-coming increasingly less effective, yet the 50-something Mayer was too young for knee replacement surgery. When Mayer saw a television commercial featuring the Center for Pain Medicine in Fargo, she made an appointment to see Dr. Majid Ghazi, a board-certified anesthesiologist and interventional pain physician. And for the first time in several years, Mayer found hope. She learned of a new treatment option: regenerative medicine.

“Regenerative Medicine is a new area in medicine which utilizes the body’s own biologic,” Ghazi says. “The therapy is intended to assist and to potentially replace or restore damaged tissue. The field of regenerative medicine is expanding rapidly, creating new options for the treatment of musculoskeletal and spinal pain.”

Many professional athletes, including Tiger Woods, Peyton Manning and Kobe Bryant, have looked to regenerative medicine to overcome injury.

Mayer opted for stem cell therapy, a treatment in which adult stem cells are extracted from pelvic bone marrow, processed in a centrifuge, and then re-injected into the damaged joint under X-ray or ultrasound.

Patients are under intravenous sedation, known as conscious sedation, during the out-patient procedure, which is performed in the center’s in-house operating room in a sterile environment.

“Overall, the bone marrow harvesting is not painful, and most patients have tolerated it well and return to work the next day,” says Joan Quam, a registered nurse at the center.

Unlike cortisone injections or surgery, stem cell therapy immediately stimulates the new growth of cartilage, tendons, ligaments, bone and fibrous connective tissues. And patients experience a reduction in pain in four to six weeks.

Ghazi administered the stem cell therapy injections to her knee and hip in the same day, and Mayer required no downtime for recovery.

Next, she worked with a physical therapist from PT/OT Partners, which is housed in same building, to strengthen the muscles surrounding her joints to better protect the joints. Within two months, she was able to perform her physical therapy regimen as well as to ride bike and garden with considerably less pain. She also re-gained the ability to sleep better. And most importantly, Mayer could play with her 3-year-old grandson — and fully enjoy it.

Mayer continues to gain improvements in her knee and hip since her June 2018 stem cell therapy injections. “No medical procedure is guaranteed; but of all the procedures we do here, stem cell therapy has been the most effective,” Ghazi adds.

Recently, she opted for a platelet rich plasma injection in her right foot to treat plantar fasciitis, and she’s seeing incremental improvements. In this treatment, Mayer’s blood was drawn and spun in a centrifuge, and then re-injected into her foot.

“Plantar fasciitis is a common problem, but unfortunately, there are not a lot of options if physical therapy is not effective,” Ghazi says. “Multiple cortisone injections can be damaging to soft tissue and surgery is not always effective.”

Regenerative medicine provides hope to people who have tried anti-inflammatory medication, steroids or injections, and surgery with-out success. “Surgical interventions are highly invasive requiring surgical resection of all or parts of the joint and insertion of a prosthesis,” Ghazi says. “Complications can be significant, and some patients develop chronic pain.”

“With the support of my husband, stem cell therapy and physical therapy, I have experienced lasting relief in my knee and hip,” May-er says. “Before my heart was in it, but now I am fully able to exercise, bike and garden. The stem cell therapy has been a good investment in my health and my future.”

“Dr. Ghazi and the entire staff are very kind and caring,” Mayer adds. “They treat you like an individual. Dr. Ghazi understood the pain I was experiencing because he’s treated so many others.”

Read more patient stories.

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Bone Marrow Concentrate Treatment Relieves Knee Pain https://centerforpainfargo.com/stem-cell-treatment-relieves-knee-pain/ https://centerforpainfargo.com/stem-cell-treatment-relieves-knee-pain/#respond Wed, 12 Jun 2019 16:51:38 +0000 https://centerforpainfargo.com/?p=2070

Katie Webster still remembers hearing her right knee pop.

She was out for a walk with a friend one fall day in 2017. After her knee popped, it felt strangely warm, then bombarded by sharp pain. A determined Webster limped the last two blocks to her home in West Fargo, N.D. The following day, at the urging of her husband, Tom, and coworkers, she went to an orthopedic walk-in clinic in Fargo.

And after that, everything spiraled downward, Webster says.

Over the years her right knee had become increasingly prone to pain and swelling, and she had received a cortisone injection earlier that summer. Tests revealed Webster’s knee had osteoarthritis. Without treatment, Webster would need a total knee replacement in five years. And she wasn’t even 40.

According to the Arthritis Foundation, 2 million Americans younger than 45 have symptomatic osteoarthritis in their knees.
Webster refused pain medication. As the American Red Cross regional disaster officer for Dakotas Region and a mother of three boys, the youngest was 4 at the time, she felt she couldn’t afford to be groggy. Her knee pain added stress to an already grueling schedule of up to 12-hour work days either on her feet or sitting in meetings, with her leg elevated, orchestrating crisis efforts.

In less than a year, Webster underwent three more cortisone injections, physical therapy and a lubrication injection. And still, she battled pain, swelling and stiffness. Yet, she didn’t want to be the mom who slowed down her sons in family activities. “I just sucked it up, kept trucking through and paying the consequences at night when I would put my leg up and feel throbbing pain,” she says.

Despite her determination, life became increasingly difficult. Webster often could not find a comfortable sleeping position, and the pain often roused her out of a dead sleep. She decided against arthroscopy because it did not offer permanent pain relief. With limited options, Webster became discouraged.

Then, in May 2018, her husband’s best friend told her about a new experimental treatment that had helped him: stem cell therapy. He explained regenerative medicine is usually not covered by insurance plans. Even so, Webster made an appointment at the Center for Pain Medicine in Fargo to meet with Dr. Majid Ghazi, a board-certified anesthesiologist and interventional pain physician.

“Dr. Ghazi was the only one to assure me,” Webster says. “I was impressed with the confidence he had, and he answered all my questions.”

Ghazi founded the Center for Pain Medicine in 2014 to promote the development and practice of safe, high-quality and cost-effective interventional pain management procedures for diagnosis and treatment of spine and joint-related pain disorders.

Unlike cortisone injections or surgery, stem cell therapy immediately stimulates the new growth of cartilage, tendons, ligaments, bone and fibrous connective tissues. And patients experience a reduction in pain in four to six weeks.

“Regenerative medicine has the potential to change traditional medicine and replace cortisone injections or even surgery,” Ghazi says.

Webster regards the out-of-pocket expenses as an investment toward her body. Her husband agreed, encouraging her to move forward with the procedure. “He hated seeing me in so much pain,” Webster says.

Adult stem cells are extracted from pelvic bone marrow, processed in a centrifuge, and then re-injected into your damaged joint under X-ray or ultrasound. Ghazi performs the out-patient procedure in the center’s in-house operating room in a sterile environment. Patients are under intravenous sedation, known as conscious sedation.

Webster underwent the procedure on Friday, June 29, 2018, and returned to work the following Monday, experiencing some tenderness near the extraction site. She completed physical therapy to strengthen the muscles supporting her right knee. Within three weeks, Webster’s right knee was significantly better.

“Your own body can heal itself,” she says. “You are guaranteed you will be injected with your own body biologics.”

Today, Webster not only walks without fear of popping, but she also runs. And she keeps up with her sons and husband in family walks and bike rides. It’s the small things Webster appreciates, such as not needing to wear pants large enough to fit over her swollen knee on date night with Tom.

“I didn’t go in expecting to receive an 18-year-old knee, but it has definitely exceeded my expectations,” Webster says.

Read more patient stories.

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