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Opioid peptide response to spinal cord stimulation in chronic critical limb ischemia

Authors :
Giuseppina Lanfranchi
Pasquale Bernardi
Fiorella Fontana
Rosanna Di Toro
Santi Mario Spampinato
Eleonora Conti
Sergio Coccheri
Francesca Bonafè
Fontana F.
Bernardi P.
Lanfranchi G.
Spampinato S.
Di Toro R.
Conti E.
Bonafè F.
Coccheri S.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Twelve patients with chronic critical limb ischemia in whom a spinal cord stimulation (SCS) system had been implanted for at least one year had increased microvascular flow and achieved healing of trophic acral lesions. After switching off the system, the clinical improvement persisted for 10 days and the neurohormonal pattern showed high plasma values of beta-endorphin and Met-enkephalin, normal dynorphin B, endothelin-1 and catecholamines, and low nitric oxide. Met-enkephalin levels were further increased (P < 0.01) immediately after switching on the electrical stimulation again. The persistence of high plasma opioid levels after switching off the spinal cord stimulation explains the absence of subjective complaints and suggests an involvement of opioids in the regulation and improvement of the microcirculation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....921722fd1d14fbec22b3025fa7b137b9