Abstract | OBJECTIVES: MATERIALS AND METHODS: We drew on professional literature spanning four decades, our work with national and international professional societies, and our own extensive clinical experience to summarize contemporary knowledge of the safety, efficacy, cost-efficiency, and challenges associated with spinal cord stimulation in treating chronic pain. RESULTS: The safety, efficacy, and cost-efficiency of spinal cord stimulation in treating chronic pain associated with FBSS and CRPS are well established through randomized controlled trials and long-term observational studies. Challenges include reducing wait-times before implant, which are associated with lower success rates; increasing awareness of this therapy among referring physicians, patients, and payers; decreasing device-related complications by incorporating advanced technology, improved operative and trialing techniques, and appropriate patient selection; and capturing functional and quality-of-life outcomes. Spinal cord stimulation must be part of an overall treatment plan to manage chronic pain, and must engage physicians, patients, their families, pharmacists, nursing staff, and mental health experts in supporting a return to employment, if possible, and to a full domestic and social life. CONCLUSIONS: Innovation in spinal cord stimulation therapy has intensified with numerous new technical capabilities, safety advances, and novel stimulation targets. This progress holds hope for the many sufferers of chronic pain.
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Authors | Krishna Kumar, David L Caraway, Syed Rizvi, Sharon Bishop |
Journal | Neuromodulation : journal of the International Neuromodulation Society
(Neuromodulation)
Vol. 17 Suppl 1
Pg. 22-35
(Jun 2014)
ISSN: 1525-1403 [Electronic] United States |
PMID | 24974773
(Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
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Copyright | © 2014 International Neuromodulation Society. |
Topics |
- Chronic Pain
(etiology, therapy)
- Complex Regional Pain Syndromes
(therapy)
- Databases, Factual
(statistics & numerical data)
- Humans
- Pain, Postoperative
(therapy)
- Spinal Cord Stimulation
(methods, standards, trends)
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