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Short-term spinal cord stimulation is an effective therapeutic approach for herpetic-related neuralgia—A Chinese nationwide expert consensus

PURPOSE: Short-term spinal cord stimulation (st-SCS) has been widely used to treat herpetic-related neuralgia (HN) in China for several years, but is still heavily debated as it has no strong evidence in clinical application. Therefore, a questionnaire survey among the Chinese pain specialist workgr...

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Autores principales: Sun, Wuping, Jin, Yi, Liu, Hongjun, Yang, Dong, Sun, Tao, Wang, Yaping, Fan, Yinghui, Fan, Xiaochong, Jin, Xiaohong, Wan, Li, Gu, Ke, Feng, Zhiying, Liu, Yiming, Mao, Peng, Song, Tao, Dequan, Wang, Xiong, Donglin, Luan, Guoming, Wang, Xiaoping, Fan, Bifa, Xiao, Lizu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9530637/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36204548
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2022.939432
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author Sun, Wuping
Jin, Yi
Liu, Hongjun
Yang, Dong
Sun, Tao
Wang, Yaping
Fan, Yinghui
Fan, Xiaochong
Jin, Xiaohong
Wan, Li
Gu, Ke
Feng, Zhiying
Liu, Yiming
Mao, Peng
Song, Tao
Dequan, Wang
Xiong, Donglin
Luan, Guoming
Wang, Xiaoping
Fan, Bifa
Xiao, Lizu
author_facet Sun, Wuping
Jin, Yi
Liu, Hongjun
Yang, Dong
Sun, Tao
Wang, Yaping
Fan, Yinghui
Fan, Xiaochong
Jin, Xiaohong
Wan, Li
Gu, Ke
Feng, Zhiying
Liu, Yiming
Mao, Peng
Song, Tao
Dequan, Wang
Xiong, Donglin
Luan, Guoming
Wang, Xiaoping
Fan, Bifa
Xiao, Lizu
author_sort Sun, Wuping
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Short-term spinal cord stimulation (st-SCS) has been widely used to treat herpetic-related neuralgia (HN) in China for several years, but is still heavily debated as it has no strong evidence in clinical application. Therefore, a questionnaire survey among the Chinese pain specialist workgroup of the Chinese Neuromodulation Society and Chinese Medical Doctor Association was carried out to achieve a consensus about the clinical use of st-SCS for HN treatment. METHODS: The contents of the questionnaire include basic information about doctors (hospital level, work experience, training, procedure numbers, etc.), efficacy, indications, and contraindications of st-SCS, operation conditions, and preoperative preparation of st-SCS, and the prospect of the st-SCS procedure. Initially, the survey was conducted on 110 experts who have practiced the st-SCS procedure from all over the provinces in China. Finally, valuable data was calculated from the 110 questionnaires excluding the doctors with <1 year of experience of st-SCS, <10 cases of procedures per year, and no standard training in SCS technique. RESULTS: Based on the 110 questionnaires, it is estimated that 5,000 to 10,000 cases of electrical stimulation are carried out nationwide each year. Sixty-nine valid questionnaires acquired from senior pain physicians were more valuable and specialized in the efficacy, indications, and contraindications of st-SCS for HN. It was commonly agreed (97.10%) that the HN patients with <3 months will obtain good effectiveness (patient satisfaction rate ≥50%). Almost all (98.55%) agreed that st-SCS can be used in SHN patients, there was a common agreement (72.46%) that AHN patients are an indication of st-SCS, and more than half agreement (53.62%) that st-SCS may be fit for early PHN (3–6 months). A common agreement (79.71%) was achieved that more than half of HN patients had the experience of nerve block or nerve pulsed RF. A similarly large number of experts 57/69 (82.61%) agreed that an 80% paresthesia coverage should be achieved at the test stimulation and 57/69 (82.61%) agreed that the treatment of st-SCS need be persistent for 1–2 weeks. CONCLUSIONS: Early HN patients can get an effective outcome from the treatment of st-SCS and maybe the indication of st-SCS. Moreover, standardized training for pain physicians and basic research and clinical studies are warranted.
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spelling pubmed-95306372022-10-05 Short-term spinal cord stimulation is an effective therapeutic approach for herpetic-related neuralgia—A Chinese nationwide expert consensus Sun, Wuping Jin, Yi Liu, Hongjun Yang, Dong Sun, Tao Wang, Yaping Fan, Yinghui Fan, Xiaochong Jin, Xiaohong Wan, Li Gu, Ke Feng, Zhiying Liu, Yiming Mao, Peng Song, Tao Dequan, Wang Xiong, Donglin Luan, Guoming Wang, Xiaoping Fan, Bifa Xiao, Lizu Front Aging Neurosci Aging Neuroscience PURPOSE: Short-term spinal cord stimulation (st-SCS) has been widely used to treat herpetic-related neuralgia (HN) in China for several years, but is still heavily debated as it has no strong evidence in clinical application. Therefore, a questionnaire survey among the Chinese pain specialist workgroup of the Chinese Neuromodulation Society and Chinese Medical Doctor Association was carried out to achieve a consensus about the clinical use of st-SCS for HN treatment. METHODS: The contents of the questionnaire include basic information about doctors (hospital level, work experience, training, procedure numbers, etc.), efficacy, indications, and contraindications of st-SCS, operation conditions, and preoperative preparation of st-SCS, and the prospect of the st-SCS procedure. Initially, the survey was conducted on 110 experts who have practiced the st-SCS procedure from all over the provinces in China. Finally, valuable data was calculated from the 110 questionnaires excluding the doctors with <1 year of experience of st-SCS, <10 cases of procedures per year, and no standard training in SCS technique. RESULTS: Based on the 110 questionnaires, it is estimated that 5,000 to 10,000 cases of electrical stimulation are carried out nationwide each year. Sixty-nine valid questionnaires acquired from senior pain physicians were more valuable and specialized in the efficacy, indications, and contraindications of st-SCS for HN. It was commonly agreed (97.10%) that the HN patients with <3 months will obtain good effectiveness (patient satisfaction rate ≥50%). Almost all (98.55%) agreed that st-SCS can be used in SHN patients, there was a common agreement (72.46%) that AHN patients are an indication of st-SCS, and more than half agreement (53.62%) that st-SCS may be fit for early PHN (3–6 months). A common agreement (79.71%) was achieved that more than half of HN patients had the experience of nerve block or nerve pulsed RF. A similarly large number of experts 57/69 (82.61%) agreed that an 80% paresthesia coverage should be achieved at the test stimulation and 57/69 (82.61%) agreed that the treatment of st-SCS need be persistent for 1–2 weeks. CONCLUSIONS: Early HN patients can get an effective outcome from the treatment of st-SCS and maybe the indication of st-SCS. Moreover, standardized training for pain physicians and basic research and clinical studies are warranted. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-09-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9530637/ /pubmed/36204548 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2022.939432 Text en Copyright © 2022 Sun, Jin, Liu, Yang, Sun, Wang, Fan, Fan, Jin, Wan, Gu, Feng, Liu, Mao, Song, Dequan, Xiong, Luan, Wang, Fan and Xiao. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Aging Neuroscience
Sun, Wuping
Jin, Yi
Liu, Hongjun
Yang, Dong
Sun, Tao
Wang, Yaping
Fan, Yinghui
Fan, Xiaochong
Jin, Xiaohong
Wan, Li
Gu, Ke
Feng, Zhiying
Liu, Yiming
Mao, Peng
Song, Tao
Dequan, Wang
Xiong, Donglin
Luan, Guoming
Wang, Xiaoping
Fan, Bifa
Xiao, Lizu
Short-term spinal cord stimulation is an effective therapeutic approach for herpetic-related neuralgia—A Chinese nationwide expert consensus
title Short-term spinal cord stimulation is an effective therapeutic approach for herpetic-related neuralgia—A Chinese nationwide expert consensus
title_full Short-term spinal cord stimulation is an effective therapeutic approach for herpetic-related neuralgia—A Chinese nationwide expert consensus
title_fullStr Short-term spinal cord stimulation is an effective therapeutic approach for herpetic-related neuralgia—A Chinese nationwide expert consensus
title_full_unstemmed Short-term spinal cord stimulation is an effective therapeutic approach for herpetic-related neuralgia—A Chinese nationwide expert consensus
title_short Short-term spinal cord stimulation is an effective therapeutic approach for herpetic-related neuralgia—A Chinese nationwide expert consensus
title_sort short-term spinal cord stimulation is an effective therapeutic approach for herpetic-related neuralgia—a chinese nationwide expert consensus
topic Aging Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9530637/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36204548
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnagi.2022.939432
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