2004
DOI: 10.1111/j.1533-2500.2004.04305.x
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The Psychological Assessment of Candidates for Spinal Cord Stimulation for Chronic Pain Management

Abstract: It is known that, in spite of meeting appropriate clinical criteria for spinal cord stimulation (SCS) and having undergone flawless procedures, a significant number of patients who fail the therapy continues to exist. It is the purpose of this article to focus on the development of psychosocial indicators of success for SCS, if any. Referring to specialist literature authors present a review of what is known, what is not known, and what remains controversial on this topic. After reading this article we hope th… Show more

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Cited by 52 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
(67 reference statements)
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“…This assessment of cautionary risk factors is similar to that proposed by Block and colleagues (Block, 1996;Block et al, 2001Block et al, , 2003. Surprisingly though, studies utilizing Block's approach do not reference the SCS literature, and the SCS literature does not reference Block's approach (Beltrutti et al, 2004;Doleys et al, 1997;Nelson et al, 1996;Williams, 1996).…”
Section: Models Of Presurgical Psychological Assessment For Spinal Comentioning
confidence: 55%
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“…This assessment of cautionary risk factors is similar to that proposed by Block and colleagues (Block, 1996;Block et al, 2001Block et al, , 2003. Surprisingly though, studies utilizing Block's approach do not reference the SCS literature, and the SCS literature does not reference Block's approach (Beltrutti et al, 2004;Doleys et al, 1997;Nelson et al, 1996;Williams, 1996).…”
Section: Models Of Presurgical Psychological Assessment For Spinal Comentioning
confidence: 55%
“…In 2004, the European Federation of International Association for the Study of Pain Chapters presented a consensus document on exclusionary criteria for SCS (Beltrutti et al, 2004) This model was simpler than that proposed by Nelson (Nelson et al, 1996), Doleys (Doleys & Olsen, 1997a) and Williams (Williams et al, 2003) ( Table 1), in that it focused only on the first tier of exclusionary risk factors, and not on the second tier of cautionary risks. Overall, the weakness of this and other SCS approaches to patient selection is that they all lack something which is central to Block's (Block et al, 2003) method: a defined method of tallying the cumulative effect of multiple mild to moderate risk factors, and determining what constitutes a high score.…”
Section: Models Of Presurgical Psychological Assessment For Spinal Comentioning
confidence: 99%
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