Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Cortizone injection

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

I had a cortizone shot in my shoulder for

" impinging " which cured the rubbing/inflamation problem. The

same doctor operated on my knee(artroscopic) and never

mentioned cortizone for chrondromalacia. However, they did

not know I had chrondromalacia until the srugery.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Sounds to me that you also need to try

Glocostrine<br>It will help you to walk better.Also try OPC-3

for<br>pain. The OPC-3 helps to clean out the free radicals

that block your Immune system from being<br>able to

cure what ails you. In other words your body should be

able to cure most deseases that you come into contact

with. But because of the way we process food nowadays

we cannot keep our Immune system clear. Have you

ever heard of a frenchman dieing of a heart atack.

No!why,because of all the red wine they drink. OPC-3 Is

composed<br>of red wine extract,grape seed extract and pine

bark. Try it and feel better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 8 years later...

Anyone have experience with a sholder injection with cortizone? After many

years it is my onl recourse for the pain. I know you should not use steroids

with Lyme but this will be a one time injection to be out of disabling pain. I

have heard pros and cons. I have tried every tx available until now and it will

not get better on its own

Thanks, Kathy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I tried it and got NO results. I've been having a terrible time with my

right shoulder ever since my mastectomies in November. Both shoulders have

been bad for years, but it's been almost constant on the right since then.

It appears to be an issue with the sub-scapular process or sub-deltoid

process, or something like that and I have a massage therapist who has begun

work on it. I hope she's right because nothing else has worked so far.

Waterloo

On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 8:40 AM, kathy <kkilmartin@...> wrote:

> Anyone have experience with a sholder injection with cortizone? After many

> years it is my onl recourse for the pain. I know you should not use

> steroids with Lyme but this will be a one time injection to be out of

> disabling pain. I have heard pros and cons. I have tried every tx available

> until now and it will not get better on its own

> Thanks, Kathy

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Kathy

It's hard to say without knowing your medical history, but I would ask

the doctor about using local anesthetic to do a nerve block. That

may, or may not, also require a type of cortisone added to reduce

inflammation to produce longer term relief.

Way back in 1985/86 I had injections of Depo-Medrol into my neck for

cervical spine injuries from a car accident. A few years later I had

nerve blocks done in an OR type setting, but I felt dramatic

improvement from the local blocks they did before the procedure!

Have you tried anything like Craniosacral therapy, OMT (osteopathic

manipulation, Bonnie Prudden, shiatsu or any other massage therapy

type techniques? I improved a lot with cranio and OMT. Shiatsu also

helped and I also did acupuncture. My point is that there my be other

options besides a steroid injection....

Good luck!

Kendra

On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 9:40 AM, kathy <kkilmartin@...> wrote:

> Anyone have experience with a sholder injection with cortizone?  After many

years it is my onl recourse for the pain.  I know you should not use steroids

with Lyme but this will be a one time injection to be out of disabling pain. I

have heard pros and cons.  I have tried every tx available until now and it will

not get better on its own

> Thanks, Kathy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had one -- once. That was the experience that taught me that the Lyme had shot

my adrenals so badly that cortisone drugs were an absolute NO for me.

My adrenal system was compromised to the point where I simply couldn't

metabolize it. Within about 12 hours, I had what only can be described as 'rhoid

rage, like athletes who dope with steroids get. I couldn't answer the phone

without picking a fight with the person on the other end. I was yelling at

family members. The last straw was the afternoon of the second day, when I

terrorized and hit my son.

After that, I locked myself in my bedroom until the drug wore off. Literally: I

was not fit to be around other people. They brought my dinner and handed it

through the door. I didn't answer the phone.

It took most of a week for the symptoms to dissipate. I don't care how much

recovery I get; I'm never doing that again. To be fair: this was a real outlier

experience; but I'm convinced that the disruptions that made it happen were

rooted in my Lyme.

The pain in my shoulder was somewhat helped by the shot. But I got a lot more

gain out of good Pilates-based physical therapy, which broke up the scar tissue

from the injury that was causing the pain in the first place.

Have also done craniosacral, chiro (several styles), acupuncture, shiatsu, and a

lot of other stuff for neck pain (which was ostensibly caused by two rear-end

collisions in ten days back in 1984). What finally cured it was getting my

thyroid checked and treated. And it got even better after Lyme treatment

started, reducing the last bit of remaining inflammation in my occiput and upper

neck. I had chronic, constant neck and shoulder pain for 15 years, but haven't

had it in a decade now.

There are definitely other options besides a steroid injection. It's very

possible that your injury isn't healing right due to the Lyme; and that

addressing the Lyme and the other issues it causes (like thyroid and adrenal

problems) will help put your neck back right as well.

Sara

On Jan 7, 2010, at 5:21 06PM, Kendra wrote:

> Kathy

>

> It's hard to say without knowing your medical history, but I would ask

> the doctor about using local anesthetic to do a nerve block. That

> may, or may not, also require a type of cortisone added to reduce

> inflammation to produce longer term relief.

>

> Way back in 1985/86 I had injections of Depo-Medrol into my neck for

> cervical spine injuries from a car accident. A few years later I had

> nerve blocks done in an OR type setting, but I felt dramatic

> improvement from the local blocks they did before the procedure!

>

> Have you tried anything like Craniosacral therapy, OMT (osteopathic

> manipulation, Bonnie Prudden, shiatsu or any other massage therapy

> type techniques? I improved a lot with cranio and OMT. Shiatsu also

> helped and I also did acupuncture. My point is that there my be other

> options besides a steroid injection....

>

> Good luck!

> Kendra

>

> On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 9:40 AM, kathy <kkilmartin@...> wrote:

>> Anyone have experience with a sholder injection with cortizone? After many

years it is my onl recourse for the pain. I know you should not use steroids

with Lyme but this will be a one time injection to be out of disabling pain. I

have heard pros and cons. I have tried every tx available until now and it will

not get better on its own

>> Thanks, Kathy

>

>

> ------------------------------------

>

> Lyme Disease News continually updated from thousands of sources around the

> net: http://www.topix.net/health/lyme-disease

>

> MedWorm: The latest items on: Lyme Disease

> http://tinyurl.com/23dgy8

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

> > Anyone have experience with a sholder injection with cortizone?  After many

years it is my onl recourse for the pain.  I know you should not use steroids

with Lyme but this will be a one time injection to be out of disabling pain. I

have heard pros and cons.  I have tried every tx available until now and it will

not get better on its own

> > Thanks, Kathy

>

Yes, I have tried just about all those therapies as this pain goes back 20-30

years. Most therapies made it work. I did love the cranial sacral work tho as

it really helped my neck temporarily

It should be a one shot deal and my LLMD said it would be okay today.

Thanks,

Kathy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had one. It helped a very little bit for about 3 days. The reason it didn't

work is because I had a full-thickness tear in one of the tendons (it'd been

that way for about a year when I got the injection) and every time I moved the

arm it was undoing whatever minute amount of healing my body tried to do. I had

the surgery and that spot is fine now. Haven't tried them again for the chronic

tendonitis, etc. but only because the pain isn't bad enough to warrant it.

It's a good way to get a handle on the pain. The shot not working is what caused

my doc to do an MRI, then recommend a surgeon. I was " CDC positive " six ways

from Sunday and have had several cortisone shots in various places, including 2

sets of spinal injections with no increase in symptoms. Maybe it's because

they're not systemic like prednisone?

Good luck!

>

> Anyone have experience with a sholder injection with cortizone? After many

years it is my onl recourse for the pain. I know you should not use steroids

with Lyme but this will be a one time injection to be out of disabling pain. I

have heard pros and cons. I have tried every tx available until now and it will

not get better on its own

> Thanks, Kathy

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...