Publications by authors named "Michael Appeadu"

Therapeutic interventional techniques using fluoroscopy are often used in the management of spinal pain. Currently, there are no standardized means of instruction and assessment of fluoroscopic interventional spinal procedures for physiatry trainees. The aim of our study is to evaluate the utility of an interventional spine training course for physical medicine and rehabilitation residents in improving safety and efficacy when performing these procedures.

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Background: Cervicogenic headache (CGH) can often be difficult to treat, given the overlapping clinical features of other headaches and the varying sources of pain that patients report. While imaging is not useful in diagnosing CGH, anesthetic blockade of the atlanto-occipital joint, lateral atlantoaxial joint, or specific cervical zygapophyseal joints can be used to confirm the diagnosis. When conservative treatment measures, such as physical therapy, fail, interventional techniques, such as intraarticular steroid injections, have been shown in observational studies to provide relief in some patients.

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Introduction: Neuropathic pain is a common complication of spinal cord injury (SCI), and is notoriously difficult to adequately treat. Gunshot wounds (GSW) near the spinal cord may cause intractable chronic pain through spinal/nerve root transection, or reactive tissue formation resulting in nerve root compression from retained bullet fragments (RBF).

Case Presentation: This case report describes a 30-year-old man with a T12 AIS B incomplete spinal cord injury with paraplegia secondary to multiple GSW who presented with severe bilateral lower extremity dysesthesias and muscle spasms.

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