How to Improve Pain Control with Adhesive Arachnoiditis

By Dr. Forest Tennant, PNN Columnist

Some persons with Adhesive Arachnoiditis (AA) feel that more pain relief drugs, particularly opioids, will solve their problem. The fact is that we regularly review cases in which persons with AA are taking 2 or 3 opioids or even have an implanted intraspinal canal pump that contains fentanyl or Dilaudid, but they still don’t get enough pain relief to get out of bed and function.

AA is an intraspinal canal inflammatory disorder in which cauda equina nerve roots are glued by adhesions to the inside of the spinal canal covering. This definition tells it all. AA is fundamentally intraspinal canal inflammation, so unless the initial inflammation is suppressed or extinguished, it will likely continue to spread and cause more pain.

In essentially every case of failing pain control, we find that the person is doing little or nothing to suppress intraspinal canal inflammation and repair damage to their nerve roots and spinal canal covering.

First Steps in Pain Control

Our research is clear. A person with MRI-documented AA can’t expect adequate pain relief unless they have a definite, daily routine to simultaneously suppress intraspinal canal inflammation and repair tissue damage to cauda equina nerve roots and the spinal canal covering.

Adequate pain control to have a good quality of life can be difficult to achieve. The first step is to obtain a list of drugs, botanicals, hormones, nutrients and physical measures that are popular in the AA community and that either suppress inflammatory or restore damaged tissue. Share your list with your family and medical practitioner. You may have to try multiple agents to develop a program that gives you better pain control.

Persons who have AA and poor pain control also need a blood test for inflammatory markers, glucose, and the hormones cortisol, pregnenolone, DHEA and testosterone.

If your pain is constant, review our Intractable Pain Syndrome website that is totally dedicated to relief from constant pain.

How to Diagnose AA

I’m pleased to announce the release of a new handbook that takes the mystery out of diagnosing AA with contrast MRI imaging once and for all. I have read hundreds of contrast MRI’s during my years in medical practice, and have found that the earlier a diagnosis is made and treatment is started, the better the prognosis is for the patient.

Unfortunately, many health care practitioners don’t know the telltale signs of AA when it appears in an MRI. As a result, AA is often misdiagnosed as “Failed Back Syndrome” or “Low Back Pain.”

“Handbook to Recognize Adhesive Arachnoiditis” is an essential read for all practitioners who are interested in treating patients with spine disorders and patients who suspect they may have AA. It’s presented in a clear and easy to read format as a “how to” guide for reading contrast MRI’s for the diagnosis of AA.

The book is filled with clearly diagrammed MRI images of documented cases of AA and should help practitioners diagnose AA and learn the difference between AA and other spine disorders with similar symptoms.

This book will also help those patients who suspect they may have AA receive a quick and proper diagnosis, thus preventing delays in effective treatment of this devastating spinal cord disease. AA is no longer rare. It is in every community, and health care practitioners can now learn how to diagnose and treat it. There is hope and help!

Forest Tennant, MD, DrPH, is retired from clinical practice but continues his research on the treatment of intractable pain and arachnoiditis. This column is adapted from a bulletin recently issued by the Arachnoiditis Research and Education Project. Readers interested in subscribing to the bulletins should send an email to tennantfoundation92@gmail.com.

The Tennant Foundation gives financial support to Pain News Network and sponsors PNN’s Patient Resources section.