Lumbar RFA Technique

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For those that use cooled, do you place parallel or perpendicular? Is parallel considered inferior given the lesion size and shape, or just takes a little longer and thus what's the point?

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For those that use cooled, do you place parallel or perpendicular? Is parallel considered inferior given the lesion size and shape, or just takes a little longer and thus what's the point?
Perpendicular
 
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just to be clear, the study MD87 posted does not discuss parallel (apparently, advanced Australian) vs perpendicular (early Australian)

i seem to remember a study that showed that saline was very effective at increasing lesion size.
 
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just to be clear, the study MD87 posted does not discuss parallel (apparently, advanced Australian) vs perpendicular (early Australian)

i seem to remember a study that showed that saline was very effective at increasing lesion size.

Correct. The studies just suggest there is *some* lesioning distal to the tip. I know the author of the study that shows contrast and lidocaine extend the lesion - he places needles parallel to the MB. The paper is not suggesting that perpendicular placement should be used.
 
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Made by Diros Technology, purchased by Avanos a little bit ago. The hub rotates and deploys the tines. Lesion extends past the needle tip, allowing for direct approach for RFA. Similar idea to cooled. Needles are pricy ($160/each), but contain the electrode , and have a pigtail for giving medication. You place the needle, deploy the tines, test, inject local, and burn, without having to remove/adjust anything. My big complaint with cooled, besides price, is that the stupid cannulas don't stay in place when you remove the stylet, usually requiring redirection once you get the probe in. B/l lumbar RFA takes maybe 10 minutes? Cost doesn't make much sense compared to standard needles, but I like it so much more than cooled.

Do you do perpendicular approach with trident? Just spoke with the Avanos rep, and the recommendation from Avanos is perpendicular angle approach just like Coolief which surprised me. They said that’s the difference between Stryker venom, the latter still needing a parallel approach to the mb
 
Do you do perpendicular approach with trident? Just spoke with the Avanos rep, and the recommendation from Avanos is perpendicular angle approach just like Coolief which surprised me. They said that’s the difference between Stryker venom, the latter still needing a parallel approach to the mb
Yes, I've been doing perpendicular approach with Trident. N = 40 or so. I've seen about half back in clinic with all but 1-2 doing very well at 4 weeks. Very pleased with the ease of use, time savings, decreased painfulness of the procedure, and results.
 
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Yes, I've been doing perpendicular approach with Trident. N = 40 or so. I've seen about half back in clinic with all but 1-2 doing very well at 4 weeks. Very pleased with the ease of use, time savings, decreased painfulness of the procedure, and results.

Thanks for the input. I’ve heard recently how much cheaper it. the hospital is asking me to try a few and see if I’d be okay to convert.
 
Perpendicular still doesn't make sense. Realistically you're not going to be touching all tines on os. 3 prongs really doesn't make much sense even if parallel. 2 prongs you mimic a short bipolar lesion if both on os not sure what the third prong floating around does
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Perpendicular still doesn't make sense. Realistically you're not going to be touching all tines on os. 3 prongs really doesn't make much sense even if parallel. 2 prongs you mimic a short bipolar lesion if both on os not sure what the third prong floating around does
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Needle tip goes down and makes contact with os. Then twist the hub and deploy the tines. The needle tip doesn't really push back when deploying the tines, so the nerve should still really be right about at the point of the needle, with the tines spreading out from there, with the center of the lesion being at the nerve. I don't know, that's how I visualize it. If the tines pushed the needle tip far back, then I agree, there wouldn't be much lesion contacting the nerve. I've seen good results, and will plan to continue with it as long as results continue to be good.
 
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fact is, early proponents for RFA only did perpendicular.

regardless of what we think now, perpendicular approach must have seemed to help, otherwise RFA would never have gotten off the ground...
 
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Perpendicular still doesn't make sense. Realistically you're not going to be touching all tines on os. 3 prongs really doesn't make much sense even if parallel. 2 prongs you mimic a short bipolar lesion if both on os not sure what the third prong floating around does
View attachment 383014
In the models and practice, you actually are getting a nice teardrop of heat that hugs that bone you're pushed again. Also, the mechanism of spreading/deploying the tines here is much more reliable as well with the Diros Trident or the Nimbus as compared to the hope and pray of Venom or Sidekick.
 
fact is, early proponents for RFA only did perpendicular.

regardless of what we think now, perpendicular approach must have seemed to help, otherwise RFA would never have gotten off the ground...
I had a very large patient recently who I had no choice but to do perpendicular and even with that approach, hubbed the 150mm needles at each level. I did get a nice multifidus twitch and am crossing my fingers it helps but if not I won't do it again.

would anyone have simply said no even after having a successful MBB? I figured I owed it to her to at least try. Do you stop the process once you see how deep they are with the MBB?
 
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I had a very large patient recently who I had no choice but to do perpendicular and even with that approach, hubbed the 15mm needles at each level. I did get a nice multifidus twitch and am crossing my fingers it helps but if not I won't do it again.

would anyone have simply said no even after having a successful MBB? I figured I owed it to her to at least try. Do you stop the process once you see how deep they are with the MBB?
I've had 2 patients like this, both did great.
 
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I have had to do the same many times. Seemed to have the same efficacy as normal placement.
 
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I've had some where I had to go perpendicular, hold the RFA needle to bone the entire burn, 2 burns at a time
 
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I had a very large patient recently who I had no choice but to do perpendicular and even with that approach, hubbed the 150mm needles at each level. I did get a nice multifidus twitch and am crossing my fingers it helps but if not I won't do it again.

would anyone have simply said no even after having a successful MBB? I figured I owed it to her to at least try. Do you stop the process once you see how deep they are with the MBB?

Yup. Clearly the issue here is her facets. Nothing else I can imagine affecting her LBP.
 
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Yup. Clearly the issue here is her facets. Nothing else I can imagine affecting her LBP.
good point, do you have a BMI cutoff for procedures? do I make her lose weight before offering a procedure that seems like it would help?
 
Table weight limit is 500 lbs.
Mine too, so clinic only for those pts bc our ASC isn't allowed to do anything over 350 lbs...

Perp vs parallel - IMO, parallel is ideal in both practice and theory, but we've all hit an occasional perpendicular that went well.

Sometimes you can't get parallel for any number of reasons...Obesity, arthropathy and especially listhesis. If they're slipping > 7mm (approx) I have had many occasion that I struggle to get parallel. If you have an isthmic spondy at L5-S1, and yall know those will go 15mm and more...Good luck being parallel at your L4 MB needle.
 
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I had a very large patient recently who I had no choice but to do perpendicular and even with that approach, hubbed the 150mm needles at each level. I did get a nice multifidus twitch and am crossing my fingers it helps but if not I won't do it again.

would anyone have simply said no even after having a successful MBB? I figured I owed it to her to at least try. Do you stop the process once you see how deep they are with the MBB?
I use 20 cm needles 1-2x/year. Not the most fun I have in the procedure room.
 
good point, do you have a BMI cutoff for procedures? do I make her lose weight before offering a procedure that seems like it would help?

Haha no of course not. It’s a business. Do the procedure. A referral to a weight loss specialist isn’t a bad idea also tho
 
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Though, I should add, you really need to address it head on with them in the office.

“Mama, I think in regards to your lbp, we need to address the elephant in the room. And that’s you!”

You get style points for that.
 
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I had a large lady that required perpendicular approach with 150mm probes hubbed. Fortunately, had access to Coolief at that time. She showed up in my office over a year later, 75 lbs. lighter and wanting another RFA. This time it was standard approach and routine. YMMV.
 
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I had a large lady that required perpendicular approach with 150mm probes hubbed. Fortunately, had access to Coolief at that time. She showed up in my office over a year later, 75 lbs. lighter and wanting another RFA. This time it was standard approach and routine. YMMV.
Second one failed...haha.
 
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Yes, I've been doing perpendicular approach with Trident. N = 40 or so. I've seen about half back in clinic with all but 1-2 doing very well at 4 weeks. Very pleased with the ease of use, time savings, decreased painfulness of the procedure, and results.
When you go perpendicular are you landing at the "eye" of the scotty dog or are you going down in AP to the SAP/TP junction and hitting that corner. Thanks!
 
When you go perpendicular are you landing at the "eye" of the scotty dog or are you going down in AP to the SAP/TP junction and hitting that corner. Thanks!
Yes, I usually oblique 25*, no tilt, and land at the eye. No worries about bulky facets getting in the way.
 
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Yes, I usually oblique 25*, no tilt, and land at the eye. No worries about bulky facets getting in the way.

But aren’t you ablating distal to the junction, and possibly missing the medial branch?
 
I'm hitting towards the top of the groove between the SAP and TP, so should be getting medial branch well.

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Man, wish people would post more of their own pics- either suboptimal or regular pics.
Not ideal spines
Went through and took a quick random sample.
 

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I had a very large patient recently who I had no choice but to do perpendicular and even with that approach, hubbed the 150mm needles at each level. I did get a nice multifidus twitch and am crossing my fingers it helps but if not I won't do it again.

would anyone have simply said no even after having a successful MBB? I figured I owed it to her to at least try. Do you stop the process once you see how deep they are with the MBB?
this patient followed up with my PA today, 90% relief. must say I'm surprised with this one.
 
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this patient followed up with my PA today, 90% relief. must say I'm surprised with this one.
He liked you and no one else took his pain seriously..

Oh yeah and “maybe” it worked 😁
 
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