Peripheral Nerve Stimulation

Peripheral nerve stimulation (PNS) is a neuromodulation technique that delivers low-intensity electrical pulses to targeted peripheral nerves via percutaneously placed leads, providing analgesia for focal neuropathic pain conditions. As a minimally invasive alternative to spinal cord stimulation, PNS offers targeted relief without the risks of neuraxial access and is increasingly utilized as a first-line interventional neuromodulation option.

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Sympathetic Blocks

Sympathetic blocks are interventional pain procedures that temporarily or permanently interrupt sympathetic nervous system outflow to diagnose and treat sympathetically-mediated pain conditions. These blocks target specific sympathetic ganglia—stellate, thoracic, celiac, or lumbar—to alleviate pain, improve blood flow, and restore function in conditions ranging from complex regional pain syndrome to visceral malignancy.

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Facet Joint Injections

Facet joint injections are diagnostic and therapeutic procedures targeting the zygapophysial joints of the spine, which are common sources of axial neck and back pain. These injections, performed under fluoroscopic guidance, deliver local anesthetic with or without corticosteroid to confirm the pain generator and provide lasting relief in appropriately selected patients.

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Epidural Steroid Injections

Epidural steroid injections are targeted interventional pain procedures delivering corticosteroids to the epidural space for radicular pain relief. They serve as an intermediate treatment option when conservative therapies fail, utilizing interlaminar, transforaminal, or caudal approaches under fluoroscopic guidance to maximize safety and precision.

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Ultrasound-Guided Regional Anesthesia

Ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia revolutionizes perioperative care by enabling real-time visualization of nerves, needles, and local anesthetic spread. Mastering UGRA demands sonoanatomy proficiency, meticulous needle-tip tracking, and readiness for complications like LAST. Benefits include enhanced success rates, reduced opioid consumption, and faster recovery—transforming patient outcomes.

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Procedural Sedation

Procedural sedation requires achieving moderate (conscious) sedation—where patients remain responsive and protect their airways—through meticulous pre-procedural assessment, continuous monitoring by a dedicated provider, and careful drug titration. Mastery demands pharmacological knowledge, airway management skills, and readiness to rescue patients from unintended deeper sedation levels at any moment.

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Deep Sedation

Deep sedation suppresses consciousness so patients respond only to painful stimuli. Airway and ventilation may be compromised. Achieve it with propofol or ketamine, mandatory capnography, and preoxygenation. Airway rescue equipment must be ready. Unlike conscious sedation, deep sedation requires two providers and carries general anesthesia‑level risks.

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Conscious Sedation

Conscious sedation is a drug-induced state where patients respond purposefully to commands and maintain their airway. Achieve it by patient selection, slow IV titration (e.g., midazolam, propofol), continuous monitoring (SpO₂, capnography), and rescue readiness. Avoid deep sedation by frequent verbal assessment.

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