Day 275 of 365 Days of Being Thankful

         Today I am thankful that I got to watch Olivia work on her mannequin.  I love watching her work!  She is so good at hair styles.  Olivia ordered this mannequin from Amazon!  She named the mannequin "Sheila."  Olivia is great at braiding and at doing an updo! Sheila has red, purple, and turquoise hair!
         
         Today I am also thankful that I got another epidural shot in my back yesterday.  It can take up to two days to work so I am hoping it does.  One of the nurses there told me that she had sciatica for over a year and that she took meds for the pain. I am very limited in what meds I can take due to my tendency to get pancreatitis.  I hope this injection works completely or partially! I write my blog the day before so I am writing this on Monday afternoon.  I have NO pain relief even though I got the shot about 8:30 a.m. Monday morning.  Some days I just want to scream from the pain but I am thankful that I can try another treatment if this one doesn't work! At 9 pm Mon night, I still have the intense pain.  I am looking forward to hopefully waking up with less pain! At 9:30 a m Tuesday morning, I am in worse pain than yesterday, I don't think the shot worked at all! I had to literally crawl from my bedroom to the couch downstairs.


I found the info below on a medical website!Sciatica refers to back pain caused by a problem with the sciatic nerve. This is a large nerve that runs from the lower back down the back of each leg. When something injures or puts pressure on the sciatic nerve, it can cause pain in the lower back that spreads to the hip, buttocks, and leg. Up to 90% of people recover from sciatica without surgery
  Epidural steroid injections (ESIs) are a common treatment option for many forms of low back pain and leg pain. They have been used for low back problems since 1952 and are still an integral part of the non-surgical management of sciatica and low back pain. The goal of the injection is pain relief; at times the injection alone is sufficient to provide relief, but commonly an epidural steroid injection is used in combination with a comprehensive rehabilitation program to provide additional benefit.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Day207 of 365 Days of Being Thankful

Day 6 of Being Thankful

Day 175 of 365 Days of Being Thankful