Benefits of Ultrasound Guidance in Pain Management Injections

If you have ever spoken to your doctor about persistent pains, sports injuries or degenerative joint concerns, there is a good chance you have discussed numerous forms of treatment including injection therapies. Injections to reduce pain or hasten healing are becoming increasingly common. For decades these injections have been performed using a technique known as palpation or landmark guided – the health care provider uses anatomical landmarks on a person’s skin and bone to estimate the location of intended targets below the surface (like ligaments, tendons, and joints). However, what if there was a safer, more accurate, and more effective way of performing these injections?

Enter ultrasound-guided injections. Ultrasounds are like flashlights that allow us to see below the surface of the skin. They emit sound waves at various frequencies that penetrate the tissues of the body and bounce back to the probe at varying speeds based on the types of tissue they encounter. Like a sonar system on a boat, except here it produces a live image. Utilizing this technology provides the doctor with many advantages. The top three advantages are discussed below.

1) Improved diagnostic accuracy

Being able to see below the surface of the skin makes identifying injured tissues much more possible. Not only are we able to confirm injured tissues by visualizing pathological changes in ligaments, tendons, muscles and bursae but we can note the exact location of the injury within the tissue. This will come in very handy later. Another unique diagnostic advantage over other imaging techniques like MRI and CT scans is the fact that ultrasound provides a real-time image, which allows for an “active assessment” – where the tissues of interest can be observed while being tested during a physical examination. The combination of confirming, locating and actively testing injured tissues is an invaluable diagnostic tool.

2) Increased safety

The ultrasound can not only be used to visualize tissues of interest, but it also allows you to track the needle and medicine during the injection. When you can follow the path of your needle and see both the targets you want to hit and avoid – this creates a much safer procedure with fewer chances of error. 

3) Improved efficacy and reduced side effects

Knowing the exact location of the injury and being able to observe the path of your needle and the location of medicine, allows the practitioner to be much more precise. Being able to observe the injection translates to improved outcomes and reduced side effects. This becomes even more important with deeper, smaller and more difficult-to-access targets or when using more concentrated medicines.

Studies that compared landmark guided to ultrasound-guided injections consistently conclude that ultrasound-guided injections are more accurate and more effective with fewer side effects. One such analysis comparing the accuracy of various shoulder injections reported a rate of 93.6% vs 68.2% for acromial clavicular joint injections, 86.7% vs 26.7% for biceps tendon sheath injections and 92.5% vs 72.5% for glenohumeral injections with decreased pain and improved function at each location in favour of ultrasound guidance. 

Here at the IHC, we are proud to provide all our pain medicine injections under ultrasound guidance.

Reference;

Aly, Abdel-Rahman, Sathish Rajasekaran, and Nigel Ashworth. “Ultrasound-guided shoulder girdle injections are more accurate and more effective than landmark-guided injections: a systematic review and meta-analysis.” British journal of sports medicine 49.16 (2015): 1042-1049.