Longevity Pain Management is a physician-owned interventional pain clinic located in Oklahoma City that specializes in diagnostic and therapeutic procedures aimed at relieving chronic pain through injections, nerve blocks, and radiofrequency ablation rather than long-term opioid prescription. The practice operates with a focus on identifying the source of pain and using image-guided techniques to target treatment directly at the problem, positioning itself as an alternative to both traditional primary-care pain management and opioid-centered approaches that have become increasingly scrutinized in Oklahoma and nationwide.
Longevity operates as a private interventional pain practice, distinct from pain management offered through hospital systems or primary-care offices. Interventional pain specialists use fluoroscopy and ultrasound guidance to place needles or catheters at specific anatomical locations, delivering medication or using heat to disrupt pain signals. This approach differs fundamentally from oral pain medication management; the clinic focuses on procedures rather than prescriptions. The physicians are board-certified in pain management and anesthesiology, credentials that require fellowship training beyond general medical school and residency. The clinic serves patients with chronic pain from arthritis, disc disease, neuropathy, and post-surgical pain, as well as acute pain from injuries.
Longevity Pain Management offers epidural steroid injections (into the space around the spinal cord), facet joint injections (targeting arthritis in the spine), sacroiliac joint injections, trigger point injections, peripheral nerve blocks, and radiofrequency ablation (using heat to deaden nerves causing chronic pain). The clinic also performs medial branch blocks, which are diagnostic injections that help identify whether a specific joint is causing pain before pursuing longer-term treatment.
Pricing varies significantly based on the procedure. Epidural steroid injections typically range from $800 to $1,500 depending on the spinal level and imaging complexity. Radiofrequency ablation, which provides longer-lasting relief (6 to 12 months typically), costs $1,200 to $2,500. Diagnostic medial branch blocks are less expensive, usually $400 to $600. These figures assume standard pricing; verify current costs when scheduling, as facility fees and imaging charges may apply. Most major insurance plans cover these procedures when medically necessary, though prior authorization is often required.
The clinic typically recommends a series approach. For example, a patient with facet-joint arthritis might receive two to three injections spaced 2 to 4 weeks apart before considering radiofrequency ablation if relief is substantial. This tiered method allows providers to assess response before committing to a more invasive, longer-lasting procedure.
Oklahoma City patients seeking interventional pain care can choose between hospital-based pain clinics (affiliated with Integris Health, OU Health, or Mercy) and independent practices like Longevity. Hospital-based clinics often have advantages in imaging capacity and admitting privileges if complications arise, but they may have longer wait times and higher facility markups; a hospital system's epidural injection can cost $2,000 to $3,000 for the same procedure. Independent practices typically offer shorter wait times (Longevity often schedules new patients within 2 to 3 weeks) and lower overhead costs.
Primary-care physicians in Oklahoma City can prescribe pain medication but generally do not perform injections; they refer out for procedural pain management. Orthopedic surgeons in Oklahoma City sometimes offer in-office joint injections, but they typically focus on surgical candidates and do not offer spinal interventions. Longevity's focus is exclusively on nonsurgical, image-guided procedures, which suits patients who have exhausted medication options or prefer to avoid opioids.
Choose Longevity if you have specific spinal or joint pain that might respond to targeted injection, prefer an independent clinic with lower overhead, and want a physician who specializes in nothing but interventional techniques. Choose a hospital-based clinic if you have complex medical history, want imaging immediately available on-site (Longevity uses an outside facility for MRI), or feel safer within a hospital system. Choose your primary-care doctor or orthopedist for general pain management, medication adjustment, or evaluation before referral.
Longevity suits patients with well-localized chronic pain (back, neck, hip, joint pain from osteoarthritis or disc disease), those who have tried medication with inadequate relief or side effects, and those seeking to reduce or eliminate opioid dependence. The clinic is also appropriate for diagnostic evaluation when the pain source is unclear; a medial branch block can confirm or rule out facet joint involvement before committing to ablation.
Longevity does not suit patients with widespread pain (fibromyalgia, whole-body neuropathy) that does not have a single anatomical source, those with acute pain lasting less than 3 to 6 months (too early for most interventional procedures), or patients who need immediate pain relief from a severe acute injury (an emergency room is appropriate). The clinic also does not manage pain through medications, so patients seeking to adjust or start pain prescriptions should see their primary-care doctor or a pain-medication specialist.
A new-patient appointment at Longevity typically lasts 45 to 60 minutes. The physician reviews your medical history, pain timeline, prior imaging (MRI, X-rays), and past treatments. A physical examination follows, often including range-of-motion tests and palpation to identify tender areas. The physician may order imaging (X-ray or ultrasound during the visit) or review recent MRI films to confirm the likely source of pain. Insurance authorization is often discussed; Longevity's staff can submit prior-authorization requests before scheduling a procedure.
If a procedure is appropriate, the clinic schedules it for a follow-up visit, usually within 1 to 2 weeks. Patients are asked to stop certain blood thinners (aspirin, ibuprofen) three to five days before injection procedures. The procedure itself lasts 15 to 30 minutes depending on complexity; patients are then monitored for 30 minutes and allowed to go home the same day, though they cannot drive immediately and must arrange a ride.
Longevity Pain Management operates Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with limited Saturday hours available seasonally; confirm current Saturday availability when calling. The clinic is located in a medical office building in northwest Oklahoma City and offers free on-site parking. Procedures requiring fluoroscopy or ultrasound imaging are performed in the clinic's on-site procedure room, but advanced imaging (MRI, CT) is not available; the clinic works with nearby imaging centers for pre-procedure imaging. Appointment scheduling can be done by phone or through the clinic's website; wait times for new-patient consultations average 2 to 3 weeks, and procedure slots often fill 1 to 2 weeks out.
Longevity Pain Management fills a gap in Oklahoma City's pain-care landscape by offering a focused, nonsurgical alternative to opioid prescription and surgery, with shorter wait times and lower costs than hospital-based interventional clinics, making it the logical choice for patients with specific structural pain who want procedural relief without medication dependence.
