Make Pain a Thing of the Past – Pain Relief Myths – Physician Partners of America

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Physician Partners of America Pain Relief Group is pleased to announce that Alejandro G. Tapia, M.D., will join its Boynton Beach location, serving patients in the Boynton Beach and Wellington areas, starting Monday, Dec. 11.

Dr. Tapia is a board-certified and fellowship-trained interventional pain management physician. He brings extensive medical knowledge and experience in minimally invasive techniques to treat spinal pain.

Dr. Tapia earned his medical degree from Universidad Central del Este Facultad de Medicina in San Pedro, Dominican Republic. He completed his Anesthesiology residency training at the University of Miami, and completed his internship at the Department of Surgery at the University of South Alabama.

He completed his residency at the University of Miami Department of Anesthesiology, and his fellowship training in Interventional Pain Medicine at the University of Michigan. He most recently worked at The Medical Group of South Florida, Inc.

Dr. Tapia is a member of the International Spine Intervention Society, Diplomat of the American Academy of Pain Management, American Society of Regional Anesthesia and the Florida Society of Interventional Pain Physicians.

Bilingual in English and Spanish, he is known for bringing compassion, a warm sense of humor and medical expertise to his practice.

Patients seeking an appointment with Dr. Tapia can call (844) 542-5724. The clinic is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Same-day appointments are available.

 

Interviewer: We see ads all the time for magic creams and patches for pain relief. There are so many ways that claim to treat pain, between pills, patches, injections, lotions. So how do we know what actually works? Dr. Rudy Gary from Florida Pain Relief Group joins us now to help us figure it all out. Dr. Gary, welcome back.

Dr. Gary: Thank you.

Interviewer: Now, how do we know if these things really work?

Dr. Gary: Well, the best answer to that is to find out exactly what that is. You know, you hear it on the radio, you know, these cure-alls.

Interviewer: Yeah, call now.

Dr. Gary: Yeah, unfortunately, sometimes some of those are just kind of like a placebo effect. You know, it may be just aspirin could be in there. Is it gonna help? Yeah, it’s going to help you. We can probably just give you just about any patch, and one-third of the patients are going to react positively. The problem is it doesn’t last long.

Interviewer: Right.

Dr. Gary: What we have to do is you have to go see a real physician, somebody what went to medical school, studied anatomy and physiology, pharmacology, and is going to establish a diagnosis on you, is going to treat you as a patient, is going to listen to what is wrong with you, actually perform a physical examination, laboratory examinations, radiology, find out what the problem is, make a determination of how that affects you, and then get a plan in place, whether it’s a pill, a patch, an injection, whatever it may be, and target that area.

Interviewer: Well, let’s talk about some of those options out there, because what would be the best way to alleviate pain? Would it be a pill, would it be a patch, an injection, a cream? I mean, there are so many choices?

Dr. Gary: So the answer is it depends.

Interviewer: Yeah.

Dr. Gary: Right? So it depends on number one, who the patient is. It depends on what the problem is. Sometimes, we can eliminate the pain with a simple injection, that’s what we take and your pain is gone. Other times, that’s not the best way and we’re going to try out some very low-level analgesics. Maybe like a muscle-relaxant, you know you might be having spasms. We’re going to determine the type of pain. So there are actually different types of pain. There is what’s called neuropathic pain which is a nerve pain, and there is something else that’s called nociceptive pain, which is more like a dull achy pain. And the medication and the treatment depends on the type of pain that it is. It’s coming from your nerves, your joints, some of the organs, and we have to target, and the physician that’s very keen to that type is going to give you much better results.

Interviewer: We’ve heard of those icy patches that you can buy at the pharmacy, and I’m wondering, do they work? There’s hot patches, cold patches.

Dr. Gary: Well, they work to the extent that… There was actually someone that won the Nobel prize for that, it’s called the gate theory. And what that does is that works about as good as… So if you’re…you may recall when you were little and you put your finger on the stove and boy that really hurts. So what does mom do? Mom comes by and she rubs your finger, and the pain is better. Well, the reason why the pain is better is because what you feel is the rubbing sensation and that blocks the pain sensation. So whether the ice packs, heat packs, you’re going to feel the heat or the cold instead of the pain.

Interviewer: Right.

Dr. Gary: It does work, so does massage and a lot of different things.

Interviewer: It’s a distraction more than anything.

Dr. Gary: Yeah, because again, it’s called the gate theory of pain.

Interviewer: Right.

Dr. Gary: So only a certain type of fiber can go to your brain for you to understand that, and then it will block the other sensation.

Interviewer: Okay.

Dr. Gary: We actually have a procedure called [inaudible 00:03:26] stimulation. And what that does is that people that are having severe low back pain, pain shooting down the legs, have had three or four back operations, we can put these tiny little electrodes so you feel a tingling sensation instead of this pain that you have. And you can control that in programming.

Interviewer: Oh, I’m sure a lot of people are happy to hear about that. Dr. Gary, thank you very much. Florida Pain Relief Group even schedules same day appointments. We’ll be back with more daytime, so don’t go away.