Offering Neuromodulation Earlier Could be Better in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

Posted: Published on July 31st, 2013

This post was added by Dr Simmons

Newswise Spinal cord stimulation should be considered earlier than a last resort for treating a rare but debilitating chronic pain condition known as complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS), according to a research analysis in Neuromodulation: Technology at the Neural Interface, the journal of the International Neuromodulation Society.

Members held an online discussion about the topic in July during one of the societys periodic Expert Panels. The discussion July 7 21 was moderated by recognized leaders in research and treatment of CRPS. The interactive session took place shortly after the societys 11th biennial World Congress Berlin in June, where some 1,400 delegates addressed the full range of neuromodulation therapies for chronic pain, movement disorder, and emerging indications.

Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) to treat chronic neuropathic pain of the trunk and limbs has been FDA-approved since 1989, and word about the option is growing among patients, referring physicians, and allied health professionals. CRPS patients such as Ed Levien of Bethesda, MD are trying to raise more awareness about treatment options for chronic pain. He only learned about SCS through another patient, 12 years after suffering an injury that triggered pain so severe he could not tolerate anything touching his affected arm.

Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) has been recognized since the U.S. Civil War. A physician noticed unusual symptoms in soldiers who had suffered nerve injury, and termed the condition causalgia now known as CRPS Type II. Formerly called Reflex Sympathy Dystrophy, CRPS Type I is more common and does not have confirmed nerve damage as its cause.

CRPS occurs about 1 percent of the time after a fracture or injury, or sometimes due to no obvious cause. Long after the initial injury has healed, in CRPS, pain continues to worsen and may spread. The affected area may swell, undergo color or temperature changes, experience tremors or lack of coordination, and become hypersensitive to touch. If the condition does not reverse with early intervention and frequent follow-up, it can become extremely disabling and lead to muscle atrophy and loss of function. While some cases may go into remission, there is no definitive cure and the condition can be difficult to treat.

In SCS, a slender electrical lead is implanted under the skin of the back to deliver a mild electrical current to the spinal cord. If trial stimulation reduces chronic pain by at least 50 percent, a patient may opt to continue and have a pacemaker-like pulse generator implanted usually under the skin of his chest, abdomen or buttock to power the device. Patients receive a hand-held controller to switch between stimulation programs at home.

Levien said the effect of SCS was noticeable right away when his device was switched on, and full benefits felt within weeks. He credits SCS with giving him his life back so he could move again, use his dominant arm, enjoy everyday activities and hobbies, and resume productive work. Prior to SCS, he said, on his worst days, the pain was so severe that even breathing was a chore. He spent more than one year in physical therapy and now works with a trainer at a gym, hoping to one day return to sports such as tennis. Interestingly, he said, he noticed he keeps reducing the power, and when he is working at the gym, he only feels arm strain on the side that does not receive SCS stimulation.

To facilitate functional rehabilitation in CRPS, according to an analysis in the March/April issue of Neuromodulation: Technology at the Neural Interface, SCS should be considered as soon as more conservative therapies have failed after perhaps three months. Because there is extensive evidence that SCS therapy is effective for the treatment of pain from CRPS and, when compared with medication management, is more cost effective, safer, and cost neutral over time, write Lawrence Poree M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D., of the Pain Clinic of Monterey Bay, and co-authors, it is clear to us . . . that SCS should be used before embarking on long-term opioid/medication management.

INS Expert Panelist Dr. Marc Russo, who directs the Hunter Pain Clinic in New South Wales and Inpatient CRPS Management Program at Lindard Private Hospital in Newcastle, Australia, has treated more than 700 CRPS patients. He agrees there is no evidence to support opioid administration in CRPS, and in his experience, intrathecal opioids tend to make CRPS patients worse over the long term.

Several steps can be taken, however:

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Offering Neuromodulation Earlier Could be Better in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome

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