Erasmus University Medical Center, Center for Pain Medicine, Anesthesiology, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Erasmus University Medical Center, Center for Pain Medicine, Anesthesiology, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Neuromodulation. 2024 Aug;27(6):1008-1019. doi: 10.1016/j.neurom.2024.04.003. Epub 2024 May 13.
Spinal neurostimulation is a therapy for otherwise intractable chronic pain. Spinal neurostimulation includes stimulation of the spinal cord (SCS), dorsal root ganglion (DRGS), and dorsal root entry zone (DREZS). New paresthesia-free neurostimulation paradigms may rely on different mechanisms of action from those of conventional tonic neurostimulation. The aim of this systematic review is to assess the existing knowledge on the effect of spinal neurostimulation on somatosensory processing in patients with chronic pain. We therefore reviewed the existing literature on the effect of various spinal neurostimulation paradigms on the supraspinal somatosensory evoked response (SER).
Multiple scientific data bases were searched for studies that assessed the effect of spinal neurostimulation on the supraspinal SER, evoked by painful or nonpainful peripheral stimuli in patients with chronic pain. We found 205 studies, of which 24 were included. Demographic data, study design, and study outcome were extracted.
Of the 24 included studies, 23 used electroencephalography to assess the SER; one study used magnetoencephalography. Fifteen studies evaluated tonic SCS; six studies (also) evaluated paresthesia-free paradigms; three studies evaluated the effect of tonic DRGS or DREZS. Sixteen studies used nonpainful stimuli to elicit the SER, 14 observed a decreased SER amplitude. Ten studies used painful stimuli to elicit the SER, yielding mixed results.
The included studies suggest that both paresthesia-based and paresthesia-free spinal neurostimulation paradigms can decrease (part of) the SER elicited by a nonpainful peripheral stimulus. The observed SER amplitude reduction likely is the effect of various spinal and supraspinal mechanisms of spinal neurostimulation that also contribute to pain relief.
Spinal neurostimulation modulates the processing of a peripherally applied nonpainful stimulus. For painful stimuli, the results are not conclusive. It is not yet clear whether paresthesia-free neurostimulation affects the SER differently from paresthesia-based neurostimulation.
脊髓神经刺激是一种治疗其他方法无法控制的慢性疼痛的疗法。脊髓神经刺激包括脊髓刺激(SCS)、背根神经节刺激(DRGS)和背根进入区刺激(DREZS)。新的无感觉异常神经刺激模式可能依赖于与传统持续刺激不同的作用机制。本系统评价的目的是评估现有关于脊髓神经刺激对慢性疼痛患者感觉处理影响的知识。因此,我们回顾了关于各种脊髓神经刺激模式对脊髓上感觉诱发电位(SER)影响的现有文献。
搜索了多个科学数据库,以评估慢性疼痛患者在接受疼痛或非疼痛性外周刺激时,脊髓神经刺激对脊髓上 SER 的影响。我们发现了 205 项研究,其中 24 项被纳入。提取了人口统计学数据、研究设计和研究结果。
在纳入的 24 项研究中,23 项使用脑电图评估 SER;一项研究使用脑磁图。15 项研究评估了持续 SCS;6 项研究(也)评估了无感觉异常的模式;3 项研究评估了持续 DRGS 或 DREZS 的效果。16 项研究使用非疼痛性刺激来引出 SER,14 项观察到 SER 幅度减小。10 项研究使用疼痛性刺激来引出 SER,结果不一。
纳入的研究表明,基于感觉异常和无感觉异常的脊髓神经刺激模式都可以降低(部分)由非疼痛性外周刺激引起的 SER。观察到的 SER 幅度降低可能是脊髓神经刺激的各种脊髓和脊髓上机制的影响,这些机制也有助于缓解疼痛。
脊髓神经刺激调节外周应用非疼痛性刺激的处理。对于疼痛性刺激,结果尚无定论。目前尚不清楚无感觉异常的神经刺激是否与基于感觉异常的神经刺激对 SER 的影响不同。