Articles: outcome.
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Baseline and 12-month follow-up data from a prospective controlled study on patients treated with SCS for neuropathic limb pain (NLP) are analyzed critically. The outcome on pain, use of medication, and quality of life are reported and compared with the literature. Patients enrolled from April 1999 to December 2001 were part of a quality system study by the Dutch Working Group on Neuromodulation. ⋯ The difference between baseline and 12-m follow-up is statistically significant for all measures. We conclude that the outcome measures indicate that SCS significantly reduces pain and enhances quality of life in patients having NLP not responding to other adjuvant therapy. Recommendations are proposed to make studies more comparable.
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Ever since its initial development in the late 1960s, spinal cord stimulation (SCS) has been used to treat a number of painful conditions. European practice, in contrast to that in North America, has used peripheral arterial disease (PAD) as a primary indication for SCS. First employed in patients with PAD in 1976, SCS was shown by Cook et al. to heal chronic leg ulcers. ⋯ Recent randomized prospective studies have questioned some of the conclusions from these preceding retrospective data. In addition to the questions related to outcomes, theories regarding exact mechanisms by which SCS improves circulatory parameters remain unclear. A thorough Medline literature review on the subject of SCS in peripheral vascular disease was thus undertaken to attempt to clarify questions regarding which patients are best suited for SCS therapy, pinpoint possible methodologic flaws in previous studies, and to review the background, outcomes, mechanisms of action, complications, and alternatives for SCS in patients with PAD.
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Published studies of intradiscal thermal annuloplasty (IDTA) have shown at most 50% pain relief as an improved outcome with little focus on functional improvement in the treatment of discogenic pain. Previous studies have used a number of criteria for patient selection including low back pain unresponsive to conservative care, no compressive radiculopathy, positive provocative discography and absence of previous surgery at the same symptomatic level. The purpose of present study is to examine the hypothesis that additional inclusion criteria for patient selection such as disc height, absence of degenerative disc disease (DDD) in untreated discs, absence of herniated nucleus pulposus or lumbar canal stenosis may improve the outcome of treatment. ⋯ We found dramatic improvement of pain scores and ADLs following IDTA when strict patient selection was applied. We believe that IDTA is an effective, minimally invasive treatment for discogenic pain in properly selected patients.
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Degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis is a frequent cause of disability in the elderly population. Epidural steroid injections are a commonly used conservative modality in the treatment of patients with degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis. Relatively few studies have specifically addressed the efficacy of epidural steroid injections for spinal stenosis, with success rates varying from 20% to 100%. ⋯ Caudally placed fluoroscopically guided epidural steroid injections offered a safe, minimally invasive option for managing pain caused by lumbar spinal stenosis. The concurrent presence of degenerative spondylolisthesis appears to be an independent positive prognostic factor for successful outcome.
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The Prospective Italian Register of spinal cord stimulation (SCS) was designed to evaluate the clinical outcome of patients with severe peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) treated with SCS. Baseline data were collected for all patients with PAOD undergoing SCS treatment (September 1998 to February 2001) at 34 participating centers. If, after a 2- to 3-week trial, SCS demonstrated significant clinical benefits, a permanent implantable pulse generator was implanted. ⋯ All PAOD parameters improved significantly during follow-up. At 12 months postimplantation, 76.1% of patients were responsive to SCS therapy. The reduction in the use of analgesics and the number and duration of hospital stays offers clear economic advantages.