Stereotactic and functional neurosurgery
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Stereotact Funct Neurosurg · Jan 1989
Pacing of the diaphragm to control breathing in patients with paralysis of central nervous system origin.
Thirty-five patients, 21 males and 14 females, aged 2-69 years (mean 25 years) with partial or total respiratory paralysis due to high cervical cord lesions, brain stem lesions, or central hypoventilation syndrome (sleep apnoea, 'Ondine's curse'), received phrenic nerve stimulators for pacing of the diaphragm. At a mean follow-up time of 46 months (range 2 months to 10 years) 15 patients are entirely independent of respirator and 8 quadriplegics ventilate with pacers at different daytime intervals and use mechanical ventilators during the night. Five patients have stopped pacing and 7 additional cases have died of causes unrelated to electrophrenic stimulation.
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Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) was used in 49 cases to control resistant deafferentation pain resulting from causalgia, phantom limb, plexus and nerve root avulsion, postherpetic neuralgia, reflex sympathetic dystrophy and amputation. In all cases, one or two standard percutaneous leads were introduced into the epidural space and manipulated until the spinal segment at which external stimulation provoked paresthesic sensation in the painful area. Two weeks of external stimulation trial was used to determine the efficiency of the system. ⋯ In 36 out of the 49 tested cases showing a positive response to percutaneous SCS, the device was permanently implanted. After a mean follow-up of 5.5 years, 57% of patients had satisfactory pain relief (over 75%). Side effects were limited to dislodgement of the electrode in 1 case and wire extrusion in another, both requiring replacement of the stimulator.
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Stereotact Funct Neurosurg · Jan 1989
Epidural spinal cord stimulation in the management of reflex sympathetic dystrophy.
Eighteen subjects with intractable pain due to reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD) underwent treatment by epidural spinal cord stimulation (SCS). All the patients had previously undergone multiple sympathetic blocks and/or surgical sympathectomy with either no results or only temporary therapeutic effects. Four subjects did not experience any beneficial effects during a 1-week trial and the electrode was removed, and 14 patients had the system internalized surgically. ⋯ All the problems were corrected surgically under local anesthesia. SCS has some value in the management of refractory RSD pain in selected cases. Because of the limited series and follow-up, its value in the comprehensive management of RSD requires further investigation.
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Stereotact Funct Neurosurg · Jan 1989
Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation and spinal cord stimulation for pain relief in reflex sympathetic dystrophy.
35 patients with the diagnosis of reflex sympathetic dystrophy in a late stage have been treated with transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS). 6 out of the 35 were also submitted to spinal cord stimulation (SCS). The follow-up was from 10 to 36 months. ⋯ In the long run these results are better than those obtained with sympathetic blocks and sympathectomy. TENS and SCS have no effect on osteoporosis or ankylosis.