TESTS AND PROCEDURES

Trigger Point Injection: Your Experience

January 17, 2020

Trigger Point Injection: Your Experience

Healthcare provider giving man injection in back of neck.

Most trigger point injections are done in your healthcare provider's office. You may be told to stop taking certain medicines before the procedure. Bring test results with you, as instructed.

During the procedure

You will sit in a chair or lie on an exam table so your healthcare provider can reach the affected muscle.

  • Your healthcare provider will feel and stretch the muscle to find the exact spot of the trigger point. This may hurt, but will not take long.

  • Once the trigger point is found, it is injected. The injection may contain medicine, such as a local anesthetic, which numbs the area. Ask your healthcare provider  what kind of medicine he or she uses.

  • If you have other trigger points, the process is repeated.

After the treatment

You can go home soon after treatment. Take it easy for the rest of the day. The injection sites may be sore for a day or so. Put ice or heat on the treated sites as instructed by your healthcare provider. Ask what medicines are safe to take if you need pain relief. You can return to work the same day or the day after the treatment if your healthcare provider says it’s OK.

When to call your healthcare provider

Call your provider if you have:

  • Increased pain

  • Fever over 100.4°F ( 38°C)

  • Chills

  • Drainage at the treated site

Updated:  

January 17, 2020

Sources:  

Wong, CSM, A New Look at Trigger Point Injections, Anesthesiology Research and Practice (2012), pp. s1-s5

Reviewed By:  

Fetterman, Anne, RN, BSN,Moe, Jimmy, MD