Journal ArticleDOI
Burst spinal cord stimulation for limb and back pain.
TLDR
In contrast to tonic stimulation, burst stimulation was able to provide pain relief without the generation of paresthesias, permitting them to use a double-blinded placebo controlled approach.About:
This article is published in World Neurosurgery.The article was published on 2013-11-01. It has received 317 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Referred pain & Back pain.read more
Citations
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The Role of Invasive Pain Management Modalities in the Treatment of Chronic Pain.
TL;DR: Invasive analgesic therapies provide an alternative to medical management of chronic pain and include spinal injections, nerve blocks, radiofrequency ablation, neuro stimulation, and intrathecal drug delivery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Systematic Literature Review of Spinal Cord Stimulation in Patients With Chronic Back Pain Without Prior Spine Surgery.
Jan M Eckermann,Julie G. Pilitsis,Christopher Vannaboutathong,Belinda J Wagner,Rose Province-Azalde,Markus A. Bendel +5 more
TL;DR: A systematic literature search was performed to identify studies reporting outcomes for spinal cord stimulation in chronic back pain patients (with or without secondary radicular leg pain) without prior surgery using date limits from database inception to February 2021 as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI
Systematic Literature Review of Spinal Cord Stimulation in Patients With Chronic Back Pain Without Prior Spine Surgery
TL;DR: A systematic literature search was performed to identify studies reporting outcomes for spinal cord stimulation in chronic back pain patients (with or without secondary radicular leg pain) without prior surgery using date limits from database inception to February 2021 as mentioned in this paper .
Journal ArticleDOI
Results From the Partnership for Advancement in Neuromodulation Registry: A 24-Month Follow-Up.
Timothy R. Deer,Ioannis Skaribas,Tory McJunkin,Christopher Nelson,John Salmon,Amit Darnule,John Braswell,Marc Russo,Omar Fernando Gomezese +8 more
TL;DR: This longitudinal, clinical outcome study was a multicenter, prospective, observational, registry with a 24‐month assessment of patients implanted with spinal cord stimulation systems for the management of chronic pain of the trunk and/or limbs.
Journal ArticleDOI
Analgesic Efficacy of "Burst" and Tonic (500 Hz) Spinal Cord Stimulation Patterns: A Randomized Placebo-Controlled Crossover Study.
Sam Eldabe,Rui V. Duarte,Ashish Gulve,Heather Williams,Fay Garner,Morag Brookes,Grace Madzinga,Eric Buchser,Alan M. Batterham +8 more
TL;DR: The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy in reducing pain intensity in adult subjects suffering from chronic back and leg pain of burst and tonic sub‐threshold stimulation at 500 Hz and sham stimulation delivered by a spinal cord stimulation (SCS) device capable of automated postural adjustment of current intensity.
References
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How do you feel? Interoception: the sense of the physiological condition of the body.
TL;DR: Functional anatomical work has detailed an afferent neural system in primates and in humans that represents all aspects of the physiological condition of the physical body that might provide a foundation for subjective feelings, emotion and self-awareness.
Journal Article
Standardized low-resolution brain electromagnetic tomography (sLORETA): technical details.
TL;DR: The technical details of the method are presented, allowing researchers to test, check, reproduce and validate the new method, and a solution reported here yields images of standardized current density with zero localization error.
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Pain affect encoded in human anterior cingulate but not somatosensory cortex.
TL;DR: These findings provide direct experimental evidence in humans linking frontal-lobe limbic activity with pain affect, as originally suggested by early clinical lesion studies.
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Functional imaging of brain responses to pain. A review and meta-analysis (2000).
TL;DR: Data suggest that hemodynamic responses to pain reflect simultaneously the sensory, cognitive and affective dimensions of pain, and that the same structure may both respond to pain and participate in pain control.