Not familiar with the "high speed gun" used by the chiropractor, but it sounds like you may have a cervicogenic headache, which is a headache that stems from prior injury/trauma to the neck region. Imaging of the cervical spine either with MRI or plain films may be helpful in looking for any abnormalities of the neck and spine which may have been the result of the chiropractic manipulations. Indomethacin is usually reserved for cluster headaches and is dosed up to 200mg/day. Local injections with anesthetic agents such as lidocaine rather than steroids at tender points in the back of the head may also be helpful. Botox injections to release the muscle constrictions are a new treatment modality that we are experimenting with in our headache clinic, very expensive but has provided some patients with complete relief. As for the thermocoagulation, this is a neurosurgical procedure that destroys the trigeminal nerve which carries pain fibers to the head. There have been a handful of reports in the literature that have shown SOME improvement for patients with refractory headaches, but it is certainly not routine and we tend not to recommend it unless everything has been tried as there are side effects. You also have to find a good neurosurgeon that you trust. Talk to your doctor about the other alternatives mentioned above. GOod luck.
I didn't have space to add the following collateral, though important question:
How much Indomethacin is necessary to give relief to O.N. headaches? (The idea of taking Indocin, by the way, came from reading your MEDHELP archives. It is not a med commonly give here.) I am currently on 100mg daily.
I forgot to mention that since the accident mentioned in my post occured, I developed a painful tic in my neck--the neck jerks sharply, rotates to the right--almost exclusively at bedtime. I take anti-convulsants for it.
I hope you will have time to answer my post so I can decide if I need to travel to the States for decompression surgery or not. The alternative is the thermocoagulation but i don't know if it IS a real alternative. I have gotten so much contradictory info from a myriad of doctors here. I need the pain to stop, once and for all.
Thank You.
Most sincerely,
Alejandra
For a year prednisone worked better than any painkiller. The only other relief comes from percocet. Doctors had also tried imitrex, zomig, maxalt, dhe, tegretol, elavil, topomax (topamax), neurontin, calan, verapamil.
Indomethacin works but I have some side-effectes. I had an injection of something called toradol the worked.
Local nerve block injections of bipulvicaine make the pain WORSE. Root block injections last about a week. I finally had an injection at C2 that worked 2 weeks and now I'm going for a C2 gangliotomy.
I also had a medtronics neurostimulator implanted that is right under the nerve. My doctor wants to move the lead into the epidural area but my insurance won't pay.