Chapter 60 Pulsed Radiofrequency, Water-Cooled Radiofrequency, and Cryoneurolysis Flashcards
The CRF (radiofrequency currents ) lesions for pain control are created by
the passage of RF (radiofrequency) currents through an electrode placed adjacent to a nociceptive pathway to interrupt the pain impulses and thus to provide the necessary pain relief.
The application
of RF currents imparts energy to the
tissues immediately
surrounding the active electrode tip and raises the local tissue temperature, whereas the electrode itself is
heated only passively.
During CRF application the RF current is switched off once the
desired electrode temperature is reached and the repetition of the cycle maintains the selected tissue temperature.
Temperature known to be neurodestructive
Temperatures above 45° C have been known to be neurodestructive, and although selective destruction of unmyelinated C- and A-delta fibers has been suggested
during CRF the tissue
temperatures are typically raised well above
the neurodestructive
levels, but below the point of tissue gas formation (80° C to 90° C).
Complications of CRF
thermal injury to the motor and sensory nerve fibers and the complications of
weakness, neuritis, and deafferentation pain. the use of high-temperature CRF has generally been restricted to facet denervation.
Lower temperature CRF, in
the range of 55° C to 70° C, has been arbitrarily selected for
dorsal root ganglia (DRG) lesioning
pulsed radiofrequency (PRF)
which attempted to maximize the delivery of electrical energy by
using higher voltage RF currents, while concomitantly minimizing the risk of thermal tissue injury by keeping the
tissue temperatures well below the neurodestructive range
(42° C). These conflicting goals were achieved by applying the RF currents in a pulsatile manner to allow time for the heat to dissipate in between the RF pulses.
pulsed radiofrequency vs radiofrequency currency
Similarly to CRF, PRF is applied via an electrode placed in the vicinity of the target nociceptive structure. However,
unlike CRF, juxtapositioning of the electrode parallel to the
target nerve is deemed unnecessary, as the electrical currents,
and not the thermal lesion, are considered the source of neuronal dysfunction
During typical PRF application,
the RF currents are applied for
20 milliseconds, at 2 Hz,
for a total duration of 120 seconds. Therefore, for most of the lesion duration—480–500 milliseconds—no RF
currents are applied. The current voltage is controlled in a manner that the maximum electrode temperature achieved remains below 42° C.
water-cooled radiofrequency (WCRF) ablation
The basic principle of pain relief during WCRF application is similar to the CRF—a thermal lesion is created by the application of RF energy through an electrode
placed in the vicinity of the target neural structure.
WCRF is applied by using
a specialized multichannel
electrode that is actively cooled by the continuous
flow of water at ambient temperature. The active
cooling prevents the electrode from acquiring the high surrounding tissue temperatures and allows the continued flow of the RF current, with the consequent heating of
a larger tissue volume and the creation of a larger thermal lesion.
The resulting WCRF lesion is consequently comprised of a
few millimeters of cooled tissue immediately
surrounding the electrode, which is surrounded by spherical
isotherms of increasing tissue temperature, which in turn are surrounded by lower temperature isotherms at increasing distance from the electrode
Similar to CRF, the size of the WCRF lesion is dependent on
the probe size, the
electrode temperature, and the duration of RF current applied.
The larger area of neural destruction with WCRF application increases
the probability of successful denervation
of a pain generator with numerous and/or variable
afferent nociceptive innervation.
two distinct forms of WCRF techniques
monopolar and bipolar WCRF lesioning
WCRF lesioning
techniques were applied exclusively for the treatment of
sacroiliac joint dysfunction (SJD) and discogenic pain
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