Dalrymple Ashley N, Fisher Lee E, Weber Douglas J
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United States of America.
NeuroMechatronics Lab, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United States of America.
J Neural Eng. 2024 Aug 22;21(4). doi: 10.1088/1741-2552/ad6a8d.
. Phantom limb pain (PLP) is debilitating and affects over 70% of people with lower-limb amputation. Other neuropathic pain conditions correspond with increased spinal excitability, which can be measured using reflexes and-waves. Spinal cord neuromodulation can be used to reduce neuropathic pain in a variety of conditions and may affect spinal excitability, but has not been extensively used for treating PLP. Here, we propose using a non-invasive neuromodulation method, transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation (tSCS), to reduce PLP and modulate spinal excitability after transtibial amputation.. We recruited three participants, two males (5- and 9-years post-amputation, traumatic and alcohol-induced neuropathy) and one female (3 months post-amputation, diabetic neuropathy) for this 5 d study. We measured pain using the McGill Pain Questionnaire (MPQ), visual analog scale (VAS), and pain pressure threshold (PPT) test. We measured spinal reflex and motoneuron excitability using posterior root-muscle (PRM) reflexes and-waves, respectively. We delivered tSCS for 30 min dfor 5 d.. After 5 d of tSCS, MPQ scores decreased by clinically-meaningful amounts for all participants from 34.0 ± 7.0-18.3 ± 6.8; however, there were no clinically-significant decreases in VAS scores. Two participants had increased PPTs across the residual limb (Day 1: 5.4 ± 1.6 lbf; Day 5: 11.4 ± 1.0 lbf).-waves had normal latencies but small amplitudes. PRM reflexes had high thresholds (59.5 ± 6.1C) and low amplitudes, suggesting that in PLP, the spinal cord is hypoexcitable. After 5 d of tSCS, reflex thresholds decreased significantly (38.6 ± 12.2C;< 0.001).. These preliminary results in this non-placebo-controlled study suggest that, overall, limb amputation and PLP may be associated with reduced spinal excitability and tSCS can increase spinal excitability and reduce PLP.
幻肢痛(PLP)令人衰弱,影响超过70%的下肢截肢患者。其他神经性疼痛病症与脊髓兴奋性增加相关,这可以通过反射和波来测量。脊髓神经调节可用于减轻多种病症中的神经性疼痛,并且可能影响脊髓兴奋性,但尚未广泛用于治疗幻肢痛。在此,我们提议使用一种非侵入性神经调节方法,即经皮脊髓刺激(tSCS),来减轻经胫截肢后的幻肢痛并调节脊髓兴奋性。我们招募了三名参与者,两名男性(截肢后5年和9年,分别由创伤和酒精性神经病变导致)和一名女性(截肢后3个月,糖尿病性神经病变)参与这项为期5天的研究。我们使用麦吉尔疼痛问卷(MPQ)、视觉模拟量表(VAS)和疼痛压力阈值(PPT)测试来测量疼痛。我们分别使用后根 - 肌肉(PRM)反射和波来测量脊髓反射和运动神经元兴奋性。我们进行了5天的tSCS,每天30分钟。经过5天的tSCS后,所有参与者的MPQ评分从34.0±7.0临床显著降低至18.3±6.8;然而,VAS评分没有临床显著降低。两名参与者残肢的PPT增加(第1天:5.4±1.6磅力;第5天:11.4±1.0磅力)。波的潜伏期正常但波幅较小。PRM反射阈值高(59.5±6.1摄氏度)且波幅低,表明在幻肢痛中脊髓兴奋性降低。经过5天的tSCS后,反射阈值显著降低(38.6±12.2摄氏度;P<0.001)。这项非安慰剂对照研究的这些初步结果表明,总体而言,肢体截肢和幻肢痛可能与脊髓兴奋性降低相关,并且tSCS可以增加脊髓兴奋性并减轻幻肢痛。