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Randomized Controlled Trial
Postoperative analgesic effect of transcranial direct current stimulation in lumbar spine surgery: a randomized control trial.
- Philippe E Dubois, Michel Ossemann, Katalin de Fays, Pascale De Bue, Maximilien Gourdin, Jacques Jamart, and Yves Vandermeeren.
- Department of Anesthesiology, CHU Mont-Godinne UCL (Universite´ catholiquede Louvain), Yvoir, Belgium.
- Clin J Pain. 2013 Aug 1;29(8):696-701.
BackgroundUltimately, the experience of pain derives from changes in brain excitability. Therefore, modulating the excitability of cortical areas involved in pain processing may become an attractive option in the context of multimodal analgesia during the postoperative period. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) can reduce morphine consumption during the postoperative period after gastric bypass surgery. We tested the potential of another method of noninvasive brain stimulation, transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), to reduce morphine consumption or pain perception during the postoperative period.MethodsFifty-nine ASA I to II patients undergoing lumbar spine surgery were randomized to receive anodal (n=20), cathodal (n=20), or sham (n=19) tDCS in the recovery room in a double-blind manner. Morphine consumption administrated through patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) was the primary outcome; pain perception as measured by visual analog scale was the secondary outcome.ResultsThere were no statistically significant differences between the 3 groups of patients, either for PCA morphine consumption or for pain scores.ConclusionsSeveral factors may explain the observed lack of impact of tDCS on PCA morphine consumption and pain perception: the method of brain stimulation (tDCS/rTMS), potential interactions with anesthetic drugs, differences in patients population (gastric bypass surgery/lumbar spine surgery), and the previous experience of pain and chronic consumption of analgesic drugs. Further studies with tDCS should be performed before concluding that tDCS is inefficient for postoperative pain control, because noninvasive brain stimulation methods, such as rTMS and tDCS, may become attractive in the setting of multimodal analgesia.
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