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Spinal cord stimulation in the management of neuropathic pain in cancer patients: case report
Author(s) -
Valeria Quintero-Carreño,
Bilena Margarita-Molina,
Carlos Hernán Rodríguez-Martínez
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
colombian journal of anesthesiology/revista colombiana de anestesiología/revista colombiana de anestesiologia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.145
H-Index - 9
eISSN - 2145-4604
pISSN - 0120-3347
DOI - 10.5554/22562087.e934
Subject(s) - medicine , neuropathic pain , anesthesia , chronic pain , spinal cord , neuromodulation , surgery , spinal cord stimulation , cancer pain , refractory (planetary science) , cancer , stimulation , physical therapy , psychiatry , astrobiology , physics
Neuropathic pain is present in up to 40 % of all cancer patients. A considerable number of patients fail to achieve enough pain relief with conventional treatment, which is why therapeutic alternatives such as spinal cord stimulation should be considered.
Case description and results: This is the case of a female patient with chronic neuropathic pain secondary to a partial femoral nerve injury sustained during resection and lymph node dissection surgery with curative intent for a large stage II cell squamous cell carcinoma T2N0M0, localized in the right popliteal fossa. The patient presented with difficult to manage chronic neuropathic pain, despite receiving multiple oral analgesics and nerve blocks. A medullary neurostimulator was implanted that relieved the patient’s pain intensity in up to 80%, in addition to improved function and quality of life.
Conclusions: spinal cord stimulation is considered an effective neuromodulatory intervention which has shown satisfactory results in the treatment of various types of refractory chronic pain in cancer patients, including neuropathic pain.