Clearway Pain Solutions in Dundalk: Injectable and Procedural Pain Treatment Without Surgery
Clearway Pain Solutions is a single-location pain management clinic in Dundalk focused on injections and minimally invasive procedures rather than surgical intervention or medication management alone. The practice occupies a middle position in Baltimore's pain care landscape: more specialized than primary care but less acute than a hospital pain center, and distinct from large regional chains in serving a Dundalk-based patient population without requiring a trek to downtown Baltimore or Columbia.
What Clearway Pain Solutions actually is
This is an outpatient clinic run by physicians trained in interventional pain management, the subspecialty that treats pain through targeted injections (steroid, anesthetic, or other agents), nerve blocks, and image-guided procedures. Clearway does not operate an operating room; surgery is not the focus. The practice treats chronic pain from arthritis, disc disease, nerve compression, and post-surgical residual pain. Patients arrive scheduled, not as walk-ins. The clinic sits within Baltimore County, north of the city proper, which matters for insurance networks and referral routing within the University of Maryland Medical System and independent provider groups.
Services and pricing
Clearway offers epidural steroid injections (spine), joint injections (shoulder, knee, hip, ankle), nerve blocks, and radiofrequency ablation. Pricing varies by procedure and insurance. A single epidural steroid injection typically costs between $800 and $1,500 out of pocket if uninsured; most patients carry commercial or Medicare coverage, which reduces personal cost significantly depending on deductible and plan design. A knee or shoulder injection runs $600 to $1,200 before insurance adjustment. Radiofrequency ablation, which uses heat to disable a pain-carrying nerve and lasts longer than injections, ranges from $1,500 to $3,000 depending on the number of lesions. Because insurance reimbursement and patient responsibility shift frequently with plan changes, call the clinic directly to confirm your out-of-pocket figure.
Most procedures take 15 to 45 minutes and use ultrasound or fluoroscopy (live X-ray) for needle guidance. Recovery is same-day; patients go home and may feel temporary numbness or soreness. Full effect of an injection often takes 3 to 7 days.
How Clearway compares to other Dundalk and Baltimore pain management options
Dundalk itself has few pain specialists. Most Baltimore County residents with pain issues either see their primary care doctor (who typically offers medication and physical therapy referrals but not injections) or travel to larger centers. Within the immediate area, Clearway is one of the few independent pain clinics; competitors are often hospital-affiliated practices (e.g., University of Maryland Medical Center Pain Management, located downtown; Sinai Hospital's pain program) or regional chains (Interventional Pain Management Centers operate multiple Baltimore-area locations).
Clearway's advantage is local access and continuity. Hospital-affiliated practices embed pain doctors within larger systems, which can mean easier coordination with orthopedic surgery or neurology but also longer waits and higher administrative overhead. Independent chains offer convenience through multiple sites but often emphasize throughput over long-term relationship building. Clearway, as a single-location independent clinic, trades breadth of location for depth of provider familiarity and a patient base drawn largely from Dundalk and northeast Baltimore County.
Choose Clearway if you live or work in Dundalk and want to avoid downtown Baltimore traffic and parking. Choose a hospital-affiliated practice if you anticipate needing surgical consultation or complex medical coordination. Choose a chain clinic if you travel frequently and want multiple scheduling options.
Who Clearway suits and who it does not
Clearway is appropriate for patients with chronic regional pain (not whole-body fibromyalgia or centralized pain syndromes that require different approaches), confirmed structural problems (arthritis, disc bulge, joint wear visible on imaging), or failed conservative treatment (physical therapy, oral medication) who want to avoid or delay surgery. It suits insured patients and those able to pay out of pocket; uninsured patients should expect higher bills and should discuss payment plans when scheduling.
Clearway is not suitable for acute injury (go to urgent care or an emergency room), psychiatric pain complaints without structural cause, or patients seeking long-term opioid pain medication (this clinic does not prescribe controlled substances as a primary treatment model). It is also not appropriate for post-operative pain in the first few weeks; surgery centers and hospital discharge teams handle acute post-op management.
What the first visit involves
Before your appointment, bring imaging (MRI, X-ray, CT) of the affected area if you have it; if not, Clearway may order imaging during or before your visit. Bring your insurance card and government ID. The first visit is a consultation: the doctor reviews your history, imaging, and symptoms; performs an exam; and discusses whether injection or another procedure is appropriate. If you proceed, some clinics perform the procedure the same day, others schedule it for a follow-up. Expect 60 to 90 minutes for a first visit including check-in and discussion.
You will need to sign consent forms acknowledging risks (infection, nerve injury, temporary numbness or increased pain). You do not need fasting or sedation for most Clearway procedures, though you should arrange a ride if you receive any sedative.
Hours, parking, and logistics
Clearway Pain Solutions in Dundalk operates Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. (hours subject to provider schedule; verify when you call to confirm your appointment time). The clinic is located in an outpatient building, not a hospital, with on-site parking in a small lot; arrive 10 to 15 minutes early for new-patient paperwork. It does not have an emergency component, so if you experience severe pain or infection after a procedure outside business hours, go to the nearest emergency room (University of Maryland Medical Center in downtown Baltimore or Sinai Hospital in northwest Baltimore are regional anchors; Dundalk has no 24-hour ED of its own).
Most Baltimore insurance plans accept Clearway; Medicare and Medicaid coverage is available through most standard programs. Call with your insurance details to confirm in-network status before scheduling.
Clearway fills a practical gap for Dundalk residents who need specialized pain care without a long drive or hospital admission. For patients in northeast Baltimore County with chronic pain from known structural problems and failed conservative care, this clinic offers evidence-based injectable treatment at a neighborhood-accessible location.

