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Summary
Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) is a widely applied therapy to treat chronic neuropathic pain, and one of the most common indications is persisting radicular neuropathic pain following lumbar spine surgery. In traditional SCS therapies, the objective has been to replace the pain sensation with paresthesia. The anticipation is that the electrical current alters pain processing by masking the sensation of pain with a comfortable tingling or paresthesia. Although patients mostly cope with paresthesia, a significant proportion reports that the sensation is unpleasant. 'Burst' SCS utilizes complex programming to deliver high-frequency stimuli. This SCS technique seems to provide paresthesia-free stimulation, resulting in better pain relief of low back and leg pain then traditional tonic stimulation. The widespread use of SCS has not been backed by solid evidence. The absence of placebo-controlled trials has long been an important point of criticism, but due to the nature of the intervention with sensation of paresthesia, studies with placebo control have so far not been considered possible. When 'burst' SCS is used the stimulation is often unnoticed by the patient, allowing comparison with placebo stimulation. The aim of this randomized double-blind sham-controlled crossover trial is to evaluate the efficacy of 'burst' spinal cord stimulation for chronic radicular pain following spine surgery.
Official title: Spinal Cord Burst Stimulation for Chronic Radicular Pain Following Lumbar Spine Surgery: a Randomized Double-blind Sham-controlled Crossover Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
50
Start Date
2021-05-01
Completion Date
2025-08-15
Last Updated
2024-12-24
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Burst Spinal Cord Stimulation
Burst stimulation utilizes complex programming to deliver high-frequency stimuli of a 40 Hz burst mode with 5 spikes at 500 Hz per spike delivered in a constant current mode
Sham spinal cord stimulation
No spinal cord stimulation is provided
SCS implant
a subcutaneously implantable pulse generator ("pacemaker") for long-term therapy. The following system from Abbott will be implanted: ProclaimTM XR implantable pulse generator and Octrode® 8-contact lead
Locations (1)
St Olavs Hospital
Trondheim, Norway