Cervical Selective-Nerve-Root Block in Cincinnati | Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates
Cincinnati, OH Pain Management Service

Cervical Selective-Nerve-Root Block in Cincinnati

A cervical selective-nerve-root block is an image-guided injection used to help diagnose and sometimes treat pain that appears to come from a specific cervical nerve root. It is commonly discussed when neck pain, shoulder pain, upper-back pain, or arm pain follows a cervical radicular pattern and imaging alone does not fully settle the question.

What is a cervical selective-nerve-root block?

A cervical selective-nerve-root block targets one suspected cervical nerve root to help determine whether that nerve root is driving the pain pattern. It can also provide symptom relief by reducing inflammation around the irritated root.

Main Purpose Diagnose and sometimes treat cervical radicular pain
Typical Pattern Neck pain radiating into shoulder, arm, or hand
Why It Matters It can clarify which level is actually symptomatic
MRI and other imaging often help, but imaging findings do not always prove which nerve root is responsible for the pain. A selective block can improve that diagnostic clarity.

Who may be a candidate?

A cervical selective-nerve-root block may be discussed when a clinician suspects cervical radiculopathy and wants a more targeted way to confirm or calm the painful nerve root.

Neck and arm pain

Pain radiating from the neck into the shoulder, upper back, arm, or hand is a classic reason this block may be considered.

Numbness or tingling

Pins-and-needles, sensory change, or radiating discomfort in a nerve-root distribution may prompt a more selective diagnostic injection.

Diagnostic uncertainty

When symptoms, exam findings, and imaging do not line up perfectly, a selective block can help narrow the likely symptomatic level.

Persistent pain after conservative care

The procedure is more often considered after medication, therapy, activity changes, or time have not improved symptoms enough.

  • Common causes of cervical radicular pain include disc herniation, foraminal narrowing, and nerve-root inflammation.
  • Selective nerve root blocks are commonly described as both diagnostic and therapeutic in the literature.
  • This build also naturally targets phrases like “cervical selective nerve root block Cincinnati” and “cervical nerve root block Cincinnati.”

How the procedure works

The goal is to place medication near the selected cervical nerve root while verifying the needle location carefully. Technique details vary by clinician and imaging method, but the general flow is similar.

01

Pre-procedure evaluation

The patient’s symptoms, imaging, neurologic findings, and likely pain level are reviewed to choose the most appropriate target root.

02

Skin numbing and positioning

The skin is cleaned and numbed with local anesthetic. Depending on the setting, the patient may also receive mild sedation.

03

Image-guided needle placement

Fluoroscopy, contrast, CT, ultrasound, or a combined technique may be used to verify needle position and reduce the chance of vascular injection.

04

Medication delivery

A local anesthetic and steroid are commonly injected near the selected nerve root to reduce inflammation and help assess whether that root is driving the symptoms.

Recovery and what to expect

Most patients go home the same day. Recovery expectations vary, but the general short-term pattern is fairly typical.

Early response

  • Temporary numbing relief may happen first
  • Pain can briefly flare after the procedure
  • Some patients feel sore at the injection site

Next several days

  • Steroid effect may take several days to develop
  • Return to work is often possible the next day
  • Relief duration varies by diagnosis and patient response
The live practice page notes that patients often return home the same day, may return to work the next day, and may not feel the full steroid effect for up to about a week.

How results are interpreted

A cervical selective-nerve-root block can provide both diagnostic information and temporary therapeutic relief.

When the block helps diagnostically

If symptoms improve in the expected nerve-root pattern, it can increase confidence that the targeted root is contributing to the pain.

When the block helps therapeutically

Some patients experience pain reduction for days, weeks, or months, while others improve less or mainly gain diagnostic information.

When response is limited

Limited relief may suggest a different pain source, multilevel disease, or a less steroid-responsive presentation.

Why this matters clinically

Better target identification can support broader treatment planning, rehabilitation strategy, or surgical decision-making when needed.

Current literature generally describes CSNRB as useful, but not guaranteed, and emphasizes that its value is highly dependent on patient selection and technique.

Risks and safety considerations

Cervical selective-nerve-root blocks require thoughtful imaging and needle control because of nearby vascular and neurologic structures.

Common Short-Term Effects Soreness, temporary pain flare, vasovagal symptoms
Steroid-Related Effects Insomnia, fluid retention, blood pressure or blood sugar change
Rare Serious Concerns Intravascular injection and neurologic complications
  • Minor complications are more common than major complications.
  • Published safety studies report low major complication rates when experienced operators use careful technique.
  • The literature also includes warnings about rare but severe neurologic injury, which is why vascular-safe technique is emphasized.

Frequently asked questions

These FAQs are written for both patient clarity and strong search visibility.

What is a cervical selective-nerve-root block?
A cervical selective-nerve-root block is an image-guided injection used to help diagnose and sometimes treat pain coming from a specific cervical nerve root, often in patients with cervical radiculopathy.
What symptoms may lead to a cervical selective-nerve-root block?
It may be considered when patients have neck pain, shoulder pain, upper-back pain, or arm pain, numbness, tingling, or weakness that appears to follow a cervical nerve-root distribution.
What is injected during the procedure?
A local anesthetic and steroid are commonly used, though exact medication choices vary depending on the clinician’s approach and the purpose of the block.
How is the procedure guided?
Fluoroscopy, contrast, CT, ultrasound, or a combination may be used depending on the setting and technique, with attention to needle position and nearby vascular structures.
How long does relief last?
Relief varies. Some patients improve for days, weeks, or months, while others have a shorter response or primarily diagnostic information rather than durable relief.
What are the possible risks?
Risks can include soreness, temporary increased pain, bleeding, infection, elevated blood sugar, insomnia, blood pressure change, fluid retention, allergic reaction, intravascular injection, and rare neurologic complications.

Clinical references

This page is written conservatively and grounded in the live practice site plus current cervical SNRB literature.

  1. Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates — Cervical Selective-Nerve-Root Block
  2. Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates — Services
  3. Tri-State Spine & Neuromuscular Associates — Sitemap
  4. Dr. Carl M. Shapiro profile
  5. AJNR/PMC — Selective Cervical Nerve Root Blockade: Prospective Study of Immediate and Longer Term Complications
  6. AJNR/PMC — Conventional Fluoroscopy-Guided Selective Cervical Nerve Root Block: Safety and Outcomes
  7. Journal of Personalized Medicine — Ultrasound-Guided Cervical Selective Nerve Root Block vs Fluoroscopy-Guided Interlaminar Epidural Injection
  8. Pain and Therapy — Diagnosis and Treatment of Cervical Spondylotic Radiculopathy Using Selective Nerve Root Block
  9. AJNR/PMC — Selective Cervical Nerve Root Blockade: Safe and Reliable Technique
  10. PMC — Must We Discontinue Selective Cervical Nerve Root Blocks?