What Is Pain Management?
Pain management at CPS of NJ focuses on identifying and treating the specific source of pain using targeted, image-guided techniques.
This is not a general approach to symptom control. It is a structured process that combines clinical evaluation with procedures designed to confirm and treat the underlying issue.
Many patients arrive at this stage after trying physical therapy, medication, or other non-specific treatments. When those approaches do not lead to lasting improvement, the next step is to narrow the focus.
Interventional procedures allow us to do that. By targeting a specific nerve, joint, or disc, we can observe how the body responds and determine whether that structure is contributing to the pain.
Why Is Pain Management Needed?
Pain management is used when symptoms continue without a clear or lasting response to earlier treatment.
It is often the next step when:
- Pain persists despite therapy or medication
- Symptoms suggest nerve involvement
- Imaging does not fully explain the level of discomfort
- Previous treatments provided only temporary relief
In these situations, the goal is not simply to continue trying different options. It is to identify the exact source of pain and determine whether it can be treated directly.
This is where targeted procedures become valuable. By isolating specific structures, we can distinguish between joint-related pain, nerve irritation, or disc involvement.
That level of detail is what allows treatment to move forward in a more focused way, rather than repeating broad approaches that have already been tried.
How Does Comprehensive Pain Solutions Manage Pain?
Pain management procedures are performed using imaging guidance to ensure precise placement and accurate targeting.
Depending on the condition, this may include:
Injection-Based Treatments
- Trigger point injections for muscle-related pain
- Peripheral joint injections using fluoroscopic or ultrasound guidance
- Epidural steroid injections (cervical, thoracic, lumbar)
- Transforaminal epidural injections for targeted nerve treatment
Joint and Nerve Procedures
- Facet joint injections
- Medial branch blocks
- Sacroiliac joint injections
- Intercostal nerve blocks
Advanced Interventional Treatments
- Radiofrequency ablation to interrupt pain signals
- Provocative discography to identify disc-related pain
- Spinal cord stimulator trials and implantation
- Percutaneous lumbar discectomy
- Minimally invasive lumbar decompression (MILD)
- Interspinous spacer placement
- Sacroiliac joint fusion
Each procedure is selected based on how symptoms present and how the body responds to prior treatment. The goal is not to perform more procedures, but to perform the right one at the right time.
What To Expect After Pain Management Treatment
Response to treatment depends on the underlying cause of pain and how the body reacts to the procedure.
Some patients notice a change within a short period of time, particularly when inflammation is reduced around a nerve or joint. In other cases, improvement develops more gradually as irritation settles and movement becomes easier.
Early response is important, not just for relief, but for direction. It helps confirm whether the treated structure is contributing to the symptoms and whether further treatment should follow the same path.
You may experience:
- Temporary soreness at the treatment site
- Gradual improvement in pain or mobility
- Changes in how symptoms behave during daily activity
These changes are monitored closely. They guide whether additional procedures are needed, whether the same treatment should be repeated, or whether a different approach is required.
Pain management is often part of a larger process. For some patients, it provides enough relief to return to normal activity. For others, it helps define the next step more clearly, including whether surgical evaluation is appropriate.
The goal is not short-term relief alone. It is to move forward with a clearer understanding of what is causing the pain and how it should be treated.
Questions About Pain Management
Are these procedures only for chronic pain?
No. These procedures are used for both acute and chronic conditions when symptoms point to a specific structure that can be targeted. In some cases, early intervention helps prevent symptoms from becoming long-standing. In others, they are used after pain has persisted to better understand what has not responded to prior treatment.
Are injections a long-term solution?
They can be, depending on the cause of the pain. When inflammation is the primary driver, injections may provide lasting relief. In other situations, the response is temporary but still important. It helps confirm whether a specific nerve, joint, or disc is contributing to the symptoms, which then guides the next step.
Will I need multiple treatments?
That depends on how the condition responds and what is identified during treatment. Some patients improve after a single targeted procedure. Others benefit from a series that builds on the initial response. The plan is adjusted based on how symptoms change, not on a fixed schedule.
Is imaging always used during these procedures?
Yes. Fluoroscopy or ultrasound is used to guide placement in real time. This improves accuracy and helps ensure that treatment reaches the intended structure rather than surrounding tissue.
How do I know which procedure I need?
The decision comes from a combination of your symptoms, physical exam findings, and imaging. Pain that follows a nerve pattern is approached differently than pain that stays localized to a joint. The goal is to match the procedure to the structure most likely responsible.
Can pain management help me avoid surgery?
In many cases, yes. When the source of pain can be treated directly, symptoms may improve without the need for surgery. In other cases, these procedures help clarify whether surgery would address the problem or whether a different approach is more appropriate.
What if a procedure doesn’t work?
That result still provides useful information. If symptoms do not change, it suggests that the targeted area may not be the primary source. That helps narrow the focus and prevents repeating treatments that are unlikely to help.