Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Shingles vaccine update

April 14th, 2011

A recent Kaiser Permanente study has shown that the shingle vaccine (Zostavax) reduces the risk of contracting the rash by 55% in patients age 60 and older.  The study also found that the vaccine reduced the risk of ophthalmic by 63%.  The vaccine costs about $150.  All Medicare Part D (Medicare prescription drug) plans cover Zostavax, but may require a copayment.  Medicare Part B, which covers some vaccinations, does not cover Zostavax.  Some private insurance plans cover Zostavax.

If you develop shingles (whether or not you have received the vaccine), nerve blocks and epidural steroid injections can be very beneficial.

For more information on shingles, please look in our March 2010 archives.

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Dr. Todd Joye discusses treatment options for chronic pain

October 28th, 2010

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National Prescription Drug Take Back Day

September 22nd, 2010

NATIONAL PRESCRIPTION DRUG TAKE-BACK DAY

This Saturday, September 25, residents in the Charleston area have a wonderful opportunity to positively impact public health and public safety by participating in the National Prescription Drug Take Back Day.  From 10:00 am to 2:00 pm, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) and partner organizations are launching this first-ever event to get old and unwanted medications taken out of circulation, reducing their potential to be misused and abused.

The primary goal of this event is to reduce prescription drug diversion, which is the use of prescription drugs for recreational purposes.  But a secondary benefit is environmental, potentially reducing the amount of prescription drugs that make their way into our water system.

Drug diversion is rapidly becoming a serious health problem, with economic costs to public and private insurers estimated at nearly $75 billion a year.  The effects on our youth are significant, as every day, approximately 2,500 teens use prescription drugs to get high for the very first time. Unfortunately, one of the common misconceptions among teens is that prescription drugs are perceived to be much safer than illegal drugs.  It is startling that in the past year, 1 in 7 teens abused prescription drugs to get high, and more than half of them started before the age of 15.

Nearly three-fourths of abused pharmaceutical drugs (like Ritalin, Xanax, Valium and narcotic pain killers) are obtained from family and friends. By removing old and unwanted prescription drugs from your home, this program has the potential to remove a significant number of potentially dangerous substances from circulation.

On the environmental front, recent studies by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and others have detected pharmaceutical drugs in varying concentrations in our nation’s water supplies.  In Philadelphia, for example, traces of 56 pharmaceuticals have been detected in the drinking water.  While drugs in waterways also result from normal excretion routes and metabolic processes, there has been increasing interest among the public in developing methods to dispose of unused pharmaceuticals to reduce their introduction into our water supply.

On this Prescription Drug Take Back Day, while the DEA is most interested in controlled substances, they will take any type of unused medication. This program is free and anonymous – no personal information will be gathered.  If you are still concerned about privacy, you can empty your pills into the bin and take the bottles home with you (except for liquids).  Alternatively, you can remove the label entirely.

Please take advantage of this event, as most communities do not offer consumers the opportunity to properly dispose of medications.  Although the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy has pledged to have more of these events in the future, this is the first one. There are currently four sites scheduled to accept these drugs in our area:  the Charleston, North Charleston and Mt Pleasant Police Departments, and the Charleston County Sheriff’s Office.  If more locations are added, they will be posted on www.dea.gov.

One of the easiest ways individuals can help reduce drug diversion is to properly dispose of unused or expired medications. This not only reduces the potential for diversion of these drugs, keeping them out of the hands of our children and others, and reducing accidental overdose, but it also has the potential to significantly reduce the impact of disposal on our environment. Appropriate and safe disposal of all medications should become the new norm in our communities. Take back programs are clearly a win-win for both public health and public safety.

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Dr. Folk and Dr. Joye discuss their practice.

June 11th, 2010

Dr. Folk and Dr. Joye talk about their practice and the main issues in pain management: quality of life, chronic pain and patient care. Also hear patients tell about their experiences in this MD TV segment.

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Watch Dr. Folk and Dr. Joye discuss pain related disorders and treatment options.

May 6th, 2010

Dr. Joye demonstrates the latest advances in Epidural Steroid Injections as a  pain management option for certain types of pain disorders. Watch Dr. Joye on House Calls TV.

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Easing the Pain

April 7th, 2010

Easing the pain

Medical specialists have a growing arsenal to bring relief to patients

Published on 09/01/09

BY David quick
The Post and Courier

Heidi Whaley knows all too well about enduring chronic pain day in and day out. She describes it simply as “exhausting.”

For years, Whaley had a cyst on her sciatic nerve. Over a five-year period, the cyst started causing increasing amounts of pain, and she decided to have it removed in December 2005. But even after the surgery, the pain persisted.

“I kept thinking as it healed the pain would let up. It didn’t,” recalls Whaley. “I kept doing physical therapy, but it didn’t help. Nerve blocks gave me temporary relief. Finally, my neurosurgeon recommended a spinal stimulator.”

A spinal stimulator involves the surgical implantation of a pulse generator, which is about the size of an Oreo cookie, buried underneath the skin in the soft tissue of the lower back. The generator, which can be recharged outside the skin, is connected to wires that lead to electrodes threaded through the dorsal columns of spinal cord and provide low levels of electrical current, controlled by the patient with a remote control, that interrupt nerve impulses to the brain.

Whaley had a trial stimulator implanted in March 2008 and a permanent one put in three months later.

The verdict:

“It is fabulous,” says Whaley, who works as business manager for Charleston Day School. “It has totally changed my life.”

The last resort

Pain usually is a good thing. It is the body’s way of telling an individual something’s wrong. But often, pain signals go haywire and won’t shut off. Ever.

Like Whaley, some people face life events that, after all surgical and rehab efforts have failed, leave them in chronic pain. It’s a situation that not only reduces or eliminates someone’s ability to work, but to have an enriching life and relationships.

That’s where interventional pain management, a discipline devoted to the diagnosis and treatment of pain-related disorders, can step in. The goals of IPM are to relieve, reduce or manage pain and improve a patient’s overall quality of life through minimally invasive techniques specifically designed to diagnose and treat painful conditions.

An array of pain management services is available in the Charleston area, including clinics at the Medical University of South Carolina and Roper St. Francis (see accompanying information).

Dr. Todd Joye, a board-certified interventional pain management physician at Intervene MD (formerly Pain Associates of Charleston), has been treating chronic pain sufferers in the Lowcountry for a decade and says some may not know of all alternatives to narcotic drugs.

“The procedures that we

do are rarely as bad to have done as the patient thinks they will be,” says Joye. “Many patients hear the word ‘interventional’ or ‘nerve block’ or ‘injection,’ and they think it will be a horrible experience. That is just not the case as nearly all of our procedures can be done with minimal discomfort.”

Spinal stimulation, Joye notes, is one treatment that has been around for decades, but remains somewhat obscure.

“The most common indication for spinal stimulation is for someone who has low back and leg pain, but it is also used to treat neck and arm pain as well,” says Joye. “Additional problems that have been treated with this device are intractable angina (chest pain), peripheral vascular disease and chronic regional pain syndrome.”

Pain-relief arsenal

In some chronic pain cases, Joye admits, the best he

may be able to do is ease,

not totally relieve, a person’s pain.

At age 35, Clarke Johnson

of Goose Creek was a strapping man who worked hard and enjoyed waterskiing, hunting and fishing. Then, he injured both arms in a work accident. After 15 surgeries, including replacing his elbows with titanium joints, he suffered with pain so horrible that, “I was eating pain pills every two to three hours to cover up the pain.” He fantasized about cutting off his arms and even contemplated suicide.

“I went from being a very productive person to being secluded,” says Johnson, now 48. “I stayed inside my house for two years and couldn’t even talk. When you are in pain constantly, you can’t sleep and are in a terrible mind-set.”

Eventually, he sought to manage his pain. With Johnson, who later was involved in a car accident that injured his back, Joye says he uses a variety of approaches to achieve as much pain relief as possible without depending too heavily on one, such as narcotics. Those approaches can include anti-seizure medications, anti-depressants, nerve blocks, muscle relaxers and anti-inflammatories.

Johnson has to make

visits to Joye every seven to

10 days, or else his pain returns, but Johnson says it’s worth it.

“I owe my sanity and my

life to him,” says Johnson, who is physically limited

but now funnels his energy into helping the Shriners

raise money for burned children. “Until a person is injured to the point that I was, I think everyone’s skeptical of pain management. I didn’t believe it, but I’m a believer now.”

Reach David Quick at 937-5516 or dquick@postandcourier.com.

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