Percutaneous epidural stimulation of the low thoracic spinal cord was carried out in 41 patients with pain from peripheral arterial disease of the lower limbs. Results are reported relating to pain, claudication distance, peripheral blood flow, and trophic lesion changes. Following a trial period of stimulation, 37 patients had stimulators permanently implanted. After a mean poststimulation follow-up period of 25 months, substantial pain relief (75% to 100%) was obtained in 29 cases; claudication distance significantly increased in 15 cases; Doppler ultrasound recordings of lower-limb distal arteries showed a tendency toward normalization of pulse-wave morphology, with increase of amplitude in 12 of the 23 patients studied; a rise in skin temperature was also detected by thermography. Distal arterial blood pressure remained unchanged with stimulation. Ischemic cutaneous trophic lesions of less than 3 sq cm healed, but gangrenous conditions were not benefited. A placebo effect or the natural history of the disease can be excluded as the reason for these improvements. It is concluded that spinal cord stimulation is a valid alternative treatment for moderate peripheral arterial disorders when direct arterial surgery is not possible or has been unsuccessful.
35 patients with the diagnosis of reflex sympathetic dystrophy in a late stage have been treated with transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS). 6 out of the 35 were also submitted to spinal cord stimulation (SCS). The follow-up was from 10 to 36 months. The results obtained were TENS group: 25% excellent, 45% good, 10% fair, 20% poor; in the SCS group: 16.6% excellent; 66.6% good and 16.6% fair. In the long run these results are better than those obtained with sympathetic blocks and sympathectomy. TENS and SCS have no effect on osteoporosis or ankylosis.
Eleven patients with chronic pain due to severe vasospastic disorders in the upper limbs were treated with cervical spinal cord stimulation. In 8 patients the pain was due to reflex sympathetic dystrophy in the late stage of the disease, and 3 patients had severe idiopathic Raynaud's disease. The mean follow-up for both groups was 27 months. A total of 10 patients (90.9%) had good or excellent results. Thermographic and plethysmographic changes were observed in both groups. There seems to be a very close relationship between the increase of blood flow and the amount of pain relief achieved. In an attempt to quantify the intensity of pain, the visual analog scale and McGill Pain Questionnaire were used. Stimulation proved to be harmless, with no mortality and very low morbidity. The latter centered around local infection and displacement of the electrodes. No objective changes occurred in trophic alterations such as bone decalcification and ankylosis, but there were improvements in the alterations in the nails and skin. In the reflex sympathetic dystrophy group, the amount of pain relief achieved enabled most patients to undergo subsequent physiotherapy and rehabilitation. In severe cases of reflex sympathetic dystrophy and idiopathic Raynaud's disease, spinal cord stimulation is an alternative treatment that can be used as primary therapy or as secondary therapy after unsuccessful sympathectomy or sympathetic blocks.
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