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Effects of Spinal Cord and Peripheral Nerve Stimulation Reflected in Sensory Profiles and Endogenous Pain Modulation.

Authors :
Meyer-Frießem CH
Wiegand T
Eitner L
Maier C
Mainka T
Vollert J
Enax-Krumova EK
Source :
The Clinical journal of pain [Clin J Pain] 2019 Feb; Vol. 35 (2), pp. 111-120.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Objectives: Spinal cord and peripheral nerve stimulation (SCS/PNS) may alleviate chronic pain; however, the underlying mechanisms remain controversial. The aim of this observational study was to assess sensory changes in the ON-conditions and OFF-conditions to obtain insights into the mechanism of analgesic effects of SCS/PNS.<br />Materials and Methods: We contacted 85 patients and selected 28 patients with sufficient pain relief by SCS (n=15) or PNS (n=13) to assess their ongoing pain intensity (Numerical Rating Scale, 0 to 10), pain thresholds using Quantitative Sensory Testing (DFNS-protocol), and conditioned pain modulation (CPM) in a nonrandomized manner 2 to 4 hours after SCS/PNS deactivation (OFF-condition) and during stimulation (ON-condition). For each patient, the number of abnormally decreased pain thresholds, the presence of dynamic mechanical allodynia, and/or increased pain sensitivity was additionally totaled OR summed.<br />Results: In the ON-condition, pain intensity decreased (Numerical Rating Scale SCS: 6.5±2.1 vs. 3.7±2.3, P<0.01; PNS: 6.2±1.4 vs. 4±1.9, P<0.01), but this did not correlate with any single sensory parameter. However, for SCS, the total number of parameters indicating hyperalgesia was significantly reduced in the ON-condition (45 vs. 23, P=0.001). A smaller CPM effect in the OFF-condition correlated with a greater CPM improvement during stimulation (SCS: r=-0.741, P=0.002; PNS: r=-0.773, P=0.003), independently from the spontaneous pain intensity.<br />Discussion: The analgesic effect of SCS/PNS did not correlate with changes of single sensory parameters, but SCS/PNS reduced the number of abnormal hyperalgesic findings disregarding the kind of applied stimuli, suggesting a general antihyperalgesic effect. In addition, stimulation improved the endogenous pain inhibition. Both findings indicate that SCS/PNS may modulate central circuits.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1536-5409
Volume :
35
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Clinical journal of pain
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30260842
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/AJP.0000000000000661