Hello,
This is Dr. Justin Yanuck MD and I’ve given myself 10 minutes to talk about a paradox I see often in Orange County, California.
Question: “My doctor says my MRI looks okay, but I am in constant pain. What is going wrong?”
Answer:
This is a classic issue in modern pain management. We have been taught to look at the image to find the pain. If the MRI shows a bulging disc, we blame the disc. If the image is clear, we sometimes tell the patient it is in their head. Both of these approaches are often wrong. As I’ve mentioned in a study of healthy runners before, you can have a terrible looking MRI and feel zero pain. This is because pain is not just about the tissue. It is about how your brain and spinal cord process information.
Think of your nervous system as a computer. If the hardware is a little bit worn out, the computer can still run fine. But if the software has a bug, the computer will crash even if the hardware looks brand new. Chronic pain is often a software problem. Your nerves have become sensitized. They have learned to fire pain signals even when there is no injury present. The nerves essentially over-reacting to every signal they get from your body.
Ketamine allows us to address the software. By blocking the NMDA receptors, we can quiet down those overactive nerves. We aren’t just masking the pain like an opioid does. We are allowing the system to reset. During the 48 to 72 hours after an infusion, your brain is in a highly plastic state. This is when we use our reprogramming protocol to teach your nervous system a new way to process signals. We are shifting the focus from the “stuff that is wrong” on an image to the way your brain actually perceives your body.
If you have more questions, feel free to email us at info@renewketamineinfusion.com or book a free consultation.
Cheers,
Dr. Justin Yanuck, MD
Renew Ketamine Infusion
Tustin, San Juan Capistrano, Seal Beach