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Chronic Pain After Work Injury

Home » Workers’ Compensation & Work-Related Injuries in OKC » Chronic Pain After Work Injury

Chronic Pain After Work InjuryA work injury can change daily life in ways many people do not expect. What begins as a strain, a fall, or a repetitive-motion injury can develop into persistent pain that disrupts work, sleep, and daily movement. When pain persists for months, it may indicate nerve irritation, inflammation, or structural damage that requires targeted interventional care.

Many patients who come to Comprehensive Spine and Pain are dealing with symptoms that have never fully resolved or that have gradually worsened after a workplace accident. If ongoing pain is affecting your ability to work or move comfortably, call (405) 601-4227 or contact us online to schedule an evaluation.

When Acute Pain Becomes Chronic

When Acute Pain Becomes ChronicMost injuries begin with acute pain, which is the body’s natural response to tissue damage or inflammation. Acute pain typically improves as the injury heals. When symptoms last longer than expected, pain may shift into a chronic condition.

Pain is generally considered chronic when it continues for three months or longer. At this stage, the nervous system may remain sensitized even after the original injury improves, meaning the body continues sending pain signals despite partial healing. Several factors can contribute to this transition:

  • Ongoing inflammation around injured tissues
  • Nerve irritation or compression
  • Scar tissue formation
  • Repetitive stress on the injured area
  • Delayed or incomplete treatment

Early recognition of this shift allows our physicians to intervene before sensitization becomes more difficult to address.

Why Early Treatment Matters for Work Injury Pain

When pain after a work injury is not addressed promptly, the nervous system can begin to adapt in ways that make symptoms harder to treat over time. A process called central sensitization can develop, where the spinal cord and brain become increasingly responsive to pain signals, amplifying discomfort even as the original injury stabilizes.

Early interventional evaluation gives our physicians the opportunity to identify the underlying pain generator and address it before these neurological changes become established. For work injury patients, early treatment also supports accurate documentation of symptoms and functional limitations from the start, which matters for ongoing workers’ compensation claims.

Common Work Injuries That Lead to Chronic Pain

Many workplace injuries can result in chronic pain when underlying issues are not fully treated. At Comprehensive Spine and Pain, we regularly treat patients recovering from:

Spine Injuries

Spine injuries are particularly common after falls, lifting accidents, and repetitive motion. Herniated or bulging discs, lumbar radiculopathy, cervical nerve irritation, facet joint syndrome, and degenerative disc disease triggered by trauma can all cause pain that radiates into the arms or legs and persists long after the original incident.

Repetitive Stress Injuries

Repetitive stress injuries develop gradually in jobs requiring repeated movements. Tendinitis, carpal tunnel syndrome, shoulder impingement, and chronic muscle strain may initially seem minor but can progress into persistent inflammation without appropriate treatment or workplace modification.

Joint and Soft Tissue Injuries

Joint and soft tissue injuries, including knee, shoulder, hip, and sacroiliac joint trauma, can leave patients with ongoing instability or discomfort even after the initial injury heals. Scar tissue formation and joint instability are common contributors to long-term symptoms.

Sciatica and Spinal Stenosis

Sciatica and spinal stenosis resulting from a work injury often involve nerve compression that does not resolve without targeted intervention.

Symptoms That May Require Medical Evaluation

Common symptoms of chronic pain after a work injury include:

  • Persistent back or neck pain
  • Burning or shooting nerve pain
  • Numbness or tingling in the arms or legs
  • Muscle weakness
  • Stiffness or reduced range of motion
  • Pain that worsens with activity or prolonged sitting
  • Fatigue, sleep disruption, or headaches caused by ongoing pain

These symptoms can interfere with job performance and everyday activities. Early evaluation with our physicians can help identify the underlying cause before the condition becomes more difficult to manage.

Treatment Options at Comprehensive Spine and Pain

Treatment for chronic pain after a work injury depends on the underlying cause and severity of symptoms. Because Comprehensive Spine and Pain offers both medication management and the full spectrum of interventional procedures in-office, treatment plans can be tailored and adjusted without referrals to outside providers.

Medication pain management uses targeted anti-inflammatory and nerve-directed medications to reduce pain and support healing while other treatments take effect.

Image-guided injections deliver medication precisely to the source of pain using fluoroscopic or ultrasound guidance. For work injury patients, relevant injections include:

  • Epidural steroid injections (interlaminar and transforaminal, cervical through lumbar)
  • Facet joint injections and medial branch blocks
  • Sacroiliac joint injections
  • Trigger point injections
  • Intra-articular steroid injections for knee, shoulder, and hip injuries
  • Diagnostic nerve blocks to identify specific pain generators

Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is available for cervical, thoracic, and lumbar regions, as well as genicular ablation for knee pain. RFA disrupts the nerve signals responsible for ongoing pain and can provide longer-lasting relief than injections alone for patients with facet joint pain or nerve-mediated discomfort following a work injury.

Advanced interventional procedures, including spinal cord stimulation, intrathecal pain pumps, and peripheral nerve stimulation, are available for patients with complex or treatment-resistant chronic pain. These are performed in Comprehensive Spine and Pain’s in-office procedure suites rather than requiring hospital scheduling.

How the Nervous System Changes With Chronic Pain

One reason chronic pain after a work injury can be so difficult to manage is that the nervous system itself changes over time. With repeated or sustained pain signaling, the spinal cord and brain can become increasingly sensitized, which is a process sometimes called central sensitization.

In this state, the nervous system amplifies pain responses, meaning even minor movements or light pressure may produce a stronger pain signal than would normally be expected. For work injury patients, this reinforces the importance of interventional evaluation rather than relying solely on rest or over-the-counter pain management.

Workers’ Compensation and Chronic Pain Documentation

Work injuries often involve active workers’ compensation claims. When pain persists after the initial injury, accurate medical documentation becomes important for supporting ongoing treatment. Comprehensive Spine and Pain provides the evaluations and records needed to document:

  • The relationship between the workplace injury and current symptoms
  • Functional limitations affecting work capacity
  • The medical necessity of continued or advanced treatment
  • Progress and response to care over time

Patients dealing with a workers’ compensation claim benefit from having a single practice managing both their medical care and their documentation, reducing the risk of gaps that can complicate the claims process.

Why Work Injury Patients Choose Comprehensive Spine and Pain

Comprehensive Spine and Pain is one of the few practices in Oklahoma offering both medication management and interventional pain management under one roof. Work injury patients benefit directly from this convenience. Rather than managing medications at one office and procedures at another, the four double board-certified pain management physicians at Comprehensive Spine and Pain coordinate all aspects of care in a single, integrated setting.

Procedures are performed in dedicated in-office procedure suites, so patients do not need to schedule separate hospital visits for injections, nerve blocks, or more advanced interventional treatments. This matters for work injury patients who are navigating an active workers’ compensation claim and cannot afford gaps in documentation or care coordination.

Frequently Asked Questions About Chronic Pain After a Work Injury

What Should I Do if My Pain Returns Months After a Work Injury?

Recurring pain may indicate that the underlying injury was not fully resolved, or that a related condition, such as nerve sensitization or joint instability, has developed. A medical evaluation at Comprehensive Spine and Pain can determine whether additional treatment, a different approach, or a more advanced procedure is appropriate.

What Is the Difference Between a Work Injury Flare-Up and Chronic Pain?

A flare-up is a temporary increase in pain intensity after a period of relative stability. Chronic pain is persistent discomfort that follows no clear pattern of improvement and typically indicates an ongoing structural or neurological issue rather than a healing response.

Does Workers’ Compensation Cover Interventional Pain Treatment?

In many cases, workers’ compensation covers medical care directly related to a workplace injury, including interventional procedures such as injections and radiofrequency ablation. Proper documentation and diagnosis connecting the treatment to the original injury are typically required. Comprehensive Spine and Pain’s team can support this process through accurate clinical documentation.

Can Chronic Pain After a Work Injury Affect Mental Health?

Yes. Persistent pain activates the same neurological pathways associated with stress and anxiety. Over time, chronic pain can contribute to depression, sleep disruption, and social withdrawal. Addressing the physical source of pain through targeted treatment often has a positive effect on these secondary impacts as well.

When Should I Seek Care Rather Than Waiting for My Symptoms to Improve?

If pain has persisted for more than a few weeks, is worsening rather than improving, or is interfering with work or daily activity, waiting is unlikely to resolve the underlying issue. Early evaluation allows Comprehensive Spine and Pain’s physicians to intervene before chronic patterns become established.

Schedule an Evaluation for Chronic Pain After a Work Injury

Ongoing pain after a workplace accident warrants a thorough evaluation. Waiting and managing symptoms alone is not a solution. At Comprehensive Spine and Pain, our four double board-certified physicians offer the diagnostic precision and full range of interventional treatments needed to identify what is driving your pain and address it directly. Call (405) 601-4227 or contact us online to schedule an appointment.

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