Oklahoma Pain Center is an interventional pain management practice serving Oklahoma City's northwest side, specializing in nerve blocks, joint injections, and minimally invasive spine procedures for chronic pain conditions that have not responded to medication or physical therapy alone.
Oklahoma Pain Center operates as a private practice focused on interventional techniques rather than medication management alone. The center performs image-guided procedures (ultrasound and fluoroscopy) in an outpatient setting, avoiding hospitalizations and lengthy recovery periods for patients with back pain, neck pain, knee arthritis, and neuropathic conditions. The practice serves as both a direct-access clinic and a referral destination for patients whose primary care doctors or orthopedists recommend specialized pain control.
Oklahoma Pain Center offers epidural steroid injections (cervical, thoracic, lumbar), medial branch blocks, sacroiliac joint injections, trigger point injections, and joint aspirations. Specific pricing varies by procedure and imaging type required; a lumbar epidural steroid injection typically ranges from $800 to $1,500 out-of-pocket depending on insurance coverage and whether ultrasound or fluoroscopy guidance is used. Medicare and major commercial insurers (Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, United) are accepted. Verification of current procedure costs should occur during the scheduling call, as imaging fees and facility charges fluctuate. Most procedures are performed under local anesthesia with mild sedation available for anxious patients; full anesthesia is not used.
The practice emphasizes procedure-based intervention, distinguishing it from medication-heavy pain management clinics in Oklahoma City that may rely on opioid prescriptions or extended physical therapy referrals. Facilities like Oklahoma City Medical Centers' pain clinics and independent physiatrists offer similar injections and orthopedic referral pathways; the distinction at Oklahoma Pain Center is its high-volume procedure schedule and focus on image-guided accuracy. Patients seeking opioid management for breakthrough pain or those uncomfortable with injection-based treatment may prefer traditional pain medicine practices that offer broader pharmaceutical options. Patients with insurance plans that require referrals should confirm that Oklahoma Pain Center is in-network before scheduling.
The center works best for patients with structural or neuropathic pain diagnoses (degenerative disc disease, facet arthropathy, adhesive capsulitis, complex regional pain syndrome) who have exhausted conservative care or wish to avoid surgery and opioids. Patients seeking medication-based pain management as a primary treatment should look elsewhere. Those without imaging studies (MRI or CT) on file will likely be required to obtain them before a procedure consultation, adding time to the process. Patients who cannot tolerate local anesthesia or prefer general anesthesia for procedures are not good candidates for the outpatient setting.
Initial consultations include a review of imaging and medical history, a physical examination, and a discussion of whether an injection or block is appropriate for the patient's diagnosis. The physician will explain the procedure, its risks, recovery timeline, and expected duration of relief (typically weeks to months; repeated procedures may be scheduled if the first provides partial benefit). Patients are given written informed consent and asked about anticoagulant use and recent infections. A follow-up appointment may be scheduled immediately after the consultation if imaging and clearance are already in place, or the office will contact the patient once imaging is received.
Oklahoma Pain Center operates Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., with procedure slots typically available in afternoon windows. Parking is available on-site. Patients should plan for one to two hours total time for a first procedure visit, including check-in and post-procedure observation. A driver must accompany patients receiving sedation; driving is not permitted for at least 24 hours after the visit. Insurance pre-authorization may be required before scheduling; the office staff handles these requests but patients should allow seven to ten days for approval.
Oklahoma Pain Center fills a specific role in Oklahoma City's pain care landscape by offering procedural options that defer or eliminate the need for surgery and long-term medication dependence in patients with mechanical or neuropathic pain.
