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Epidural unilateral stimulation with “adaptive stim” option in treatment of type II CRPS

CRPS is a type of severe pain syndrome and can be triggered by previous surgery or trauma. CRPS involves vasomotor changes such as changes in color and temperature of the skin, edema, increased sensitivity to touch, and a limited range of movement. Depending on the presence of nerve damage, CRPS is...

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Autores principales: Simonyan, Armen Samvelovich, Tyurnikov, Vladimir Mikhaylovich, Simonyan, Anna Dmitrievna, Gushcha, Artem Olegovich
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8777047/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35079397
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ccr3.5305
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author Simonyan, Armen Samvelovich
Tyurnikov, Vladimir Mikhaylovich
Simonyan, Anna Dmitrievna
Gushcha, Artem Olegovich
author_facet Simonyan, Armen Samvelovich
Tyurnikov, Vladimir Mikhaylovich
Simonyan, Anna Dmitrievna
Gushcha, Artem Olegovich
author_sort Simonyan, Armen Samvelovich
collection PubMed
description CRPS is a type of severe pain syndrome and can be triggered by previous surgery or trauma. CRPS involves vasomotor changes such as changes in color and temperature of the skin, edema, increased sensitivity to touch, and a limited range of movement. Depending on the presence of nerve damage, CRPS is divided into two types. CRPS type II is associated with a confirmed peripheral nerve injury, while CRPS type I is not associated with an apparent peripheral nerve injury. Despite the ongoing therapy, sometimes, patients still have persistent, burning pain. Intractable CRPS that fail more conservative treatments may undergo neuromodulation. We want to present to your attention a case report of the successful treatment of a patient with CRPS type II using epidural unilateral stimulation. The 44‐year‐old woman came to us with complaints of burning pain and numbness of 1–3 fingers of the right hand, the lateral surface of the right wrist, and lower quarter of the forearm, and shooting pain in the projection of the right median nerve from the shoulder to the wrist. A clinical diagnosis was made—CRPS type II. During the stimulation trial, the most effective pain relief was obtained when the electrode was located in the right side of epidural space at the C4‐Th1 level. The implantation of a pulse generator was performed, and the final selection of the stimulation parameters was carried out (Pulse width: 60 ms, Rate: 210 Hz, and Amplitude: 0.9–1.6 V). The severity of pain syndrome was measured using validated scales in the preoperative period (VAS: 8–9, Pain Detect: 22, NTSS‐9: 4.62, and DN4: 8), in the early postoperative period (VAS: 0–1, Pain Detect: 6, NTSS −9: 0.66, and DN4: 1), and after 12 months (VAS: 0–2, Pain Detect: 6, NTSS‐9: 0.99, and DN4: 1). Observation during 12 months showed that a stable analgesic effect of neurostimulation was achieved using standard neuromodulation regimens and the adaptive stim option. Unilateral stimulation is an effective type of SCS in the treatment of pain syndromes. adaptive stim is usually not applicable for lead implantation at the cervical level. Nevertheless, the rational use of stimulation at threshold values allowed our patient to use adaptive stim in a non‐standard situation.
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spelling pubmed-87770472022-01-24 Epidural unilateral stimulation with “adaptive stim” option in treatment of type II CRPS Simonyan, Armen Samvelovich Tyurnikov, Vladimir Mikhaylovich Simonyan, Anna Dmitrievna Gushcha, Artem Olegovich Clin Case Rep Case Reports CRPS is a type of severe pain syndrome and can be triggered by previous surgery or trauma. CRPS involves vasomotor changes such as changes in color and temperature of the skin, edema, increased sensitivity to touch, and a limited range of movement. Depending on the presence of nerve damage, CRPS is divided into two types. CRPS type II is associated with a confirmed peripheral nerve injury, while CRPS type I is not associated with an apparent peripheral nerve injury. Despite the ongoing therapy, sometimes, patients still have persistent, burning pain. Intractable CRPS that fail more conservative treatments may undergo neuromodulation. We want to present to your attention a case report of the successful treatment of a patient with CRPS type II using epidural unilateral stimulation. The 44‐year‐old woman came to us with complaints of burning pain and numbness of 1–3 fingers of the right hand, the lateral surface of the right wrist, and lower quarter of the forearm, and shooting pain in the projection of the right median nerve from the shoulder to the wrist. A clinical diagnosis was made—CRPS type II. During the stimulation trial, the most effective pain relief was obtained when the electrode was located in the right side of epidural space at the C4‐Th1 level. The implantation of a pulse generator was performed, and the final selection of the stimulation parameters was carried out (Pulse width: 60 ms, Rate: 210 Hz, and Amplitude: 0.9–1.6 V). The severity of pain syndrome was measured using validated scales in the preoperative period (VAS: 8–9, Pain Detect: 22, NTSS‐9: 4.62, and DN4: 8), in the early postoperative period (VAS: 0–1, Pain Detect: 6, NTSS −9: 0.66, and DN4: 1), and after 12 months (VAS: 0–2, Pain Detect: 6, NTSS‐9: 0.99, and DN4: 1). Observation during 12 months showed that a stable analgesic effect of neurostimulation was achieved using standard neuromodulation regimens and the adaptive stim option. Unilateral stimulation is an effective type of SCS in the treatment of pain syndromes. adaptive stim is usually not applicable for lead implantation at the cervical level. Nevertheless, the rational use of stimulation at threshold values allowed our patient to use adaptive stim in a non‐standard situation. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2022-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC8777047/ /pubmed/35079397 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ccr3.5305 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Clinical Case Reports published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Case Reports
Simonyan, Armen Samvelovich
Tyurnikov, Vladimir Mikhaylovich
Simonyan, Anna Dmitrievna
Gushcha, Artem Olegovich
Epidural unilateral stimulation with “adaptive stim” option in treatment of type II CRPS
title Epidural unilateral stimulation with “adaptive stim” option in treatment of type II CRPS
title_full Epidural unilateral stimulation with “adaptive stim” option in treatment of type II CRPS
title_fullStr Epidural unilateral stimulation with “adaptive stim” option in treatment of type II CRPS
title_full_unstemmed Epidural unilateral stimulation with “adaptive stim” option in treatment of type II CRPS
title_short Epidural unilateral stimulation with “adaptive stim” option in treatment of type II CRPS
title_sort epidural unilateral stimulation with “adaptive stim” option in treatment of type ii crps
topic Case Reports
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8777047/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35079397
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ccr3.5305
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