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Five-Year Follow-Up of a Cordotomy
Author(s) -
Jan J. Meeuse,
A. C. M. Vervest,
Johannes H. van der Hoeven,
A.K.L. Reyners
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
pain research and management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1918-1523
pISSN - 1203-6765
DOI - 10.1155/2008/635197
Subject(s) - cordotomy , medicine , percutaneous , anesthesia , refractory (planetary science) , surgery , cervical cancer , cancer , spinal cord , physics , psychiatry , astrobiology
Percutaneous cervical cordotomy is an invasive procedure to treat severe, opioid-resistant cancer pain. It is usually proposed for patients with a limited life expectancy. As a consequence, objective quantification of the long-term effects of this procedure is lacking. The present report describes a patient who was treated with a right-sided percutaneous cervical cordotomy for refractory cancer pain. Afterward, disseminated seminoma was diagnosed, which was cured with chemotherapy. Five years after the procedure, a qualitative and quantitative evaluation of the long-term effects was performed. Sensory dysfunction was observed in the left side of the body, but no motor neuron or autonomic dysfunction was observed. The influence of these long-term effects on the patient's daily activities was limited.

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