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.
The term "centrocentral anastomosis" is used to describe the end-to-end connection across interposed nerve grafts between paired fascicular groups of the proximal stump of a severed nerve. In 22 patients harboring a painful terminal neuroma following amputation of a lower limb (20 neuromas on the sciatic nerve and two on the peroneal nerve), a centrocentral anastomosis was performed on the end of the sectioned nerve to treat pain that had not improved with conventional conservative treatment. Follow-up review at 1 year revealed that the typical neuroma pain had disappeared in all cases, although sporadic diffuse pain persisted in four. Where previous phantom sensation was present, no change was observed. The results presented here are consistent with laboratory findings demonstrating the absence of neuroma formation after centrocentral anastomosis. Therefore, this technique is recommended for the treatment of painful amputation neuroma.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.