Chronic pain is more treatable than ever before. Advances in medications and new
therapies are providing relief for many types of pain that may have been considered
untreatable in the past. The Nebraska Medical Center’s Pain Clinic, the most
comprehensive pain clinic in the region, is dedicated to treating all types of pain,
acute or chronic, cancer pain and pain associated with many types of conditions
such as headaches, back pain, fibromyalgia, arthritis or post-strokes..
“Many people suffer for years with chronic pain because they haven’t
received the right treatment or they’ve been led to believe it is not treatable,”
says Angie Rakes, M.D., pain and headache specialist at The Pain Clinic, located
at Clarkson West Medical Center on the southwest corner of 144th and West Center
Road. “The field of pain management has advanced greatly in the last five
years. We have so many new medications and treatment options that no one should
have to suffer from disabling chronic pain anymore.”
“While we may not be able to provide 100 percent relief, we can help bring
pain down to levels that are more tolerable to allow individuals to be more active
and improve their overall quality of life,” says Christoper Criscuolo, M.D.,
pain medicine specialist, who works with Dr. Rakes at the Pain Clinic.
The Pain Clinic will help you find the right medications or a combination of therapies
that can provide the most effective, long-lasting relief. The Pain Clinic uses a
comprehensive and mult-disciplinary approach to pain management that attacks
pain from many fronts and uses some of the most cutting edge techniques and therapies.
“We look at the whole person and manage all aspects of their care from medications
and physical therapy, to comfort care and working with the primary care doctor to
find the best solutions,” says Dr. Criscuolo.
Early treatment
Reaching the patient early on is an important factor in providing the most effective
pain relief. “The longer you wait to seek treatment, the more difficult it
becomes to treat pain,” says Dr. Rakes. “After months or years of chronic
pain, the body generates a map to pain that is difficult to break. The pain receptors
change and what might have been a problem that could have been treated very easily
early on, now becomes much more complicated.”