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Severe Chronic Neuropathic Pain: A Treatment Bundle, Using Spinal Cord Stimulation and Multidisciplinary Treatment, to Reduce Pain and Improve Physical Function.
Sponsor: Oslo University Hospital
Summary
People with nerve damage can develop nerve pain. The pain can sometimes be severe and unpredictable, causing odd or alarming sensations - for example, lightning-like or electric shock feelings in the area served by the damaged nerve. The investigatyors will examine a treatment for nerve pain in the legs caused by nerve damage, which can occur after a herniated disc or a bone fracture, with or without surgery. Previous research suggests that spinal cord stimulation can relieve nerve pain in the legs after surgery or injury, but its effectiveness is still debated. Other studies show that multidisciplinary treatment helps people with long-term pain to improve their quality of life and to better cope in life. National and international guidelines recommend this kind of multidisciplinary care for long-term pain. There has yet been published research on spinal cord stimulation combined with multidisciplinary treatment as a bundle intervention. The investigators therefore want to find out whether this combined approach can reduce nerve pain in the legs and improve physical functioning.
Official title: Optimizing Treatment for Chronic Neuropathic Pain: A Replicated Single Case Experimental Design Evaluating a Treatment Bundle Consisting of Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation and Spinal Cord Stimulation (SCS-R)
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 60 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
10
Start Date
2026-03-01
Completion Date
2027-07-01
Last Updated
2026-02-23
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Treatment bundle
The intervention is a treatment bundle consisting of spinal cord stimulation plus multidisciplinary rehabilitation. The multidisciplinary rehabilitation consists of excercise therapy, cognitive therapy and individualized programming of the SCS device.
Locations (1)
Department of pain management and research, Oslo university hospital
Oslo, Norway