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03-12-2015 01:49 PM
03-12-2015 02:14 PM
03-12-2015 03:57 PM
Had a cortisone shot last May, it lasted over 6 months. Nurse sprayed the area before the injection. No pain,just felt a pinch. Had a second shot last month but this one will not last as long as the first. Doctor suggests trying Euflexxa, a series of 3 shots a week apart. Eventually the knee will have to be replaced.
03-12-2015 05:46 PM
03-12-2015 06:17 PM
I had a cortisone injection in my knee about 6 weeks ago. They sprayed a numbing agent at the site. I got about 10 days of wonderful relief but sadly... I am scheduled to get Monovisc injection on Monday. It's like Synvisc or Supartz but it's a one time injection. The injection/medication cost is $1,250.00 and my copay is $275.00. Part of that is my deductible. I am not medicare age yet.
Some doctors put xylocaine or lidocaine in with the cortisone. Either way, it only hurts a little when the needle goes in. Nothing that is horrible.
03-13-2015 03:02 AM
03-13-2015 11:55 AM
Yes, I have had a few cortisone injections in each knee, both hands and my left shoulder. The knee injections weren't effective for me because of the pathology that was evident in the joint, so don't let that figure into your decision. The others were great.
However, please know this: I have ALWAYS asked for the "freezing spray." I give it this generic term, so that everyone can understand what it is and the fact that if you use this term with your doc, he/she will know exactly what you're talking about.
So, if I were you and going into the office for a cortisone injection, I would let the doc know up front that, "I want you to use the freezing spray, please." This is so common, it would have to be something extremely unusual for your doc to say "No."
My bottom line is that if I see the little tray brought into the exam room with the bottle of cortisone, a hypodermic needle (or a hypodermic needle already prepped with the cortisone), 1 or 2 alcohol preps, a Band-Aid, and maybe a few 2x2s, which is placed on a Mayo stand, but I don't see a dark brown bottle with a trigger handle (that's the spray) sitting either on that Mayo stand or on the counter, I'm going to be sure to remind the doc that I DO want the "freezing spray."
Good luck!
03-13-2015 12:12 PM
I've had double knee replacements, and before the surgery I had cortisone injections in my knees several times. My doctor added a local anesthetic to the medication being injected, so the knee was deadened as the medications were injected, and the shot was minimally painful. No down time, and the shots helped my knee pain and inflammation for a while -- sometimes for just a week or two, sometimes for several weeks. I was told that I couldn't have cortisone injections too frequently, because too much cortisone could actually worsen the joint problems and hasten the breakdown of already damaged and disintegrating cartilage. A shot or two helped the pain for a short time, but I needed surgery to decisively address my knee problems.
I haven't had the Synovisc injections, but was told they wouldn't involve any significant down-time either.
03-14-2015 07:51 AM
Thanks, everyone, for all the good info and advice. One more question, would you say, then, that there's more success with the injections if you don't wait until your knees get too bad? That's what I'm getting from most of these experiences and that's why I wanted to seek out the care of an ortho. specialist now rather than waiting until it was so bad that there were no options but surgery. Perhaps getting the injections will delay more serious treatment. What do you think?
03-14-2015 08:44 AM
On 3/14/2015 patticakes said:Thanks, everyone, for all the good info and advice. One more question, would you say, then, that there's more success with the injections if you don't wait until your knees get too bad? That's what I'm getting from most of these experiences and that's why I wanted to seek out the care of an ortho. specialist now rather than waiting until it was so bad that there were no options but surgery. Perhaps getting the injections will delay more serious treatment. What do you think?
A lot depends on what is wrong with your knee. An orthopedic surgeon may not think injections will help in some situations...and they might make a huge difference in others. I would listen to the advice of your specialist.
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