• Neurotherapeutics · Jul 2014

    Review

    Spinal stimulation for pain: future applications.

    • Konstantin V Slavin.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, University of Illinois at Chicago, 912 South Wood Street (MC 799), Chicago, IL, 60612, USA, kslavin@uic.edu.
    • Neurotherapeutics. 2014 Jul 1;11(3):535-42.

    AbstractWith continuous progress and rapid technological advancement of neuromodulation it is conceivable that within next decade or so, our approach to the electrical stimulation of the spinal cord used in treatment of chronic pain will change radically. The currently used spinal cord stimulation (SCS), with its procedural invasiveness, bulky devices, simplistic stimulation paradigms, and frustrating decline in effectiveness over time will be replaced by much more refined and individually tailored modality. Better understanding of underlying mechanism of action will allow us to use SCS in a more rational way, selecting patient-specific targets and techniques that properly fit each patient with chronic pain based on pain characteristics, distribution, and cause. Based on the information available today, this article will summarize emerging applications of SCS in the treatment of pain and theorize on further developments that may be introduced in the foreseeable future. An overview of clinical and technological innovations will serve as a basis for better understanding of SCS landscape for the next several years.

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