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RFA for Chronic Headaches Explained
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RFA for chronic headaches sounds futuristic until you look closely at what the procedure actually does. We walk through the unfiltered mechanics of radiofrequency ablation for headache disorders, from a needle placed millimeters from critical anatomy to tissue heated hot enough to cause coagulative necrosis. If you’ve been told RFA will “quiet” a nerve, we translate that into plain language, then talk about what that choice can mean for your nerves months and years later.
We trace the clinical path that brought RFA from trigeminal neuralgia to lumbar facet denervation and up into the cervical spine for cervicogenic headache. Then we break down what the research supports by target: the strongest evidence for third occipital nerve (TON) ablation after a clearly positive diagnostic nerve block, more mixed outcomes for other cervical branches, and limited to insufficient evidence as clinicians move toward superficial peripheral nerves in the scalp, forehead, and temples. We also dig into the “why it wears off” biology, including Wallerian degeneration, regrowth, aberrant regeneration, and how neuromas and post-procedural neuritis can turn a short-term win into a longer-term problem.
The biggest lens we offer is simple but decisive: extrinsic nerve compression versus intrinsic nerve damage. If your pain generator is a healthy nerve getting squeezed by muscle, fascia, or a vessel, peripheral nerve decompression surgery aims to fix the compression instead of burning the nerve. That leads to the sequence problem we can’t ignore: repeated RFA may scar the neural architecture and shrink surgical options later, while ongoing pain signaling can contribute to central sensitization. If this conversation helps you, subscribe, share it with someone navigating chronic migraine or neck-related headaches, and leave a review with the question you want us to tackle next.
If you have undergone or are considering an RFA treatment for your chronic headache, learn about nerve decompression surgery as a permanent alternative that does not cause intrinsic damage to your nerves. Call Dr. Lowenstein's Clinic, The Migraine Surgery Specialty Center, at 805-969-9004 and review the Clinic's website at headachesurgery.com.